Tag: molly
6 Best Advent Calendars (2022): Lego Star Wars, Bonne Maman, Molly J
Strictly’s Molly Rainford and Vito Coppola put on romantic display before Friday’s show
Molly Mae Hague drops huge hint she’s giving birth any day now as she packs hospital bag and mum comes to stay
PREGNANT Molly Mae Hague has packed her hospital bag as she hinted she’s ready to give birth.
The reality TV star has been planning the essential items she’ll need when she goes to deliver her daughter with boyfriend Tommy Fury.
Pregnant Molly Mae Hague has been packing her hospital bag[/caption]
Molly Mae shared this snap two days ago[/caption]
She showed fans piles of baby clothes and cute toy elephants[/caption]
Molly and boxer Tommy, both 23, are expecting their first child together after meeting on Love Island in 2019.
Fast forward three years and she is due to give birth any day now.
Molly shared a video on Instagram showing shelves at their mega mansion brimming with baby clothes.
The Youtube star, who is thought to be worth £6m, revealed she had packed an elephant toy for her baby.
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She penned over the top of her clip: “Hospital bag prep starts…
“To be quite honest I haven’t the first clue what I’m doing/packing.”
She also said her mum was keeping her company on Friday night – a week after being left in “agonising” pain and unable to get out of bed.
Molly confessed that she was petrified after she began experiencing severe stomach cramps.
She even debated whether to call an ambulance after she suddenly became ill and Tommy was away for a boxing match.
“I went to bed four in the morning, I woke up with the most excruciating stomach cramps, I was literally freaking out,” recalling the scary experience, Molly said.
“I tried to get myself out of the bed to the toilet and I couldn’t walk.
“I felt so unwell and thought whether to call myself an ambulance, I was freaking out.”
The Love Island star said she was frightened to be on her own after the pain became unbearable.
“I’ve not had any stomach ache or trapped wind that had felt like that before, so I didn’t know whether I had to be calm and let it settle or take action,” she continued on her latest YouTube video.
“It’s really hard to know, I don’t want to waste anyone’s time or even call 111 or even wake Tommy up.
“I was literally rolling about in bed, I felt so unwell and then Tommy had to leave to the airport to get a flight at 5am.
“It’s always the case, when I need him and when I feel unwell, he has to go somewhere.
“All day I still not felt a 100 per cent, but I think I’ve come to the conclusion that I think I have a stomach bug or some sort of a sickness bug.”
Molly Russell charity says plans to make encouraging self-harm online illegal is ‘significant move’
6. Molly Masters, Age 25
Company: Books That Matter Age: 25 Website: https://www.booksthatmatter.co.uk/ Business: Molly is CEO of book subscription service Books That Matter, the UK’s…
The post 6. Molly Masters, Age 25 appeared first on TechRound.
6. Molly Masters, Age 25
Company: Books That Matter Age: 25 Website: https://www.booksthatmatter.co.uk/ Business: Molly is CEO of book subscription service Books That Matter, the UK’s…
The post 6. Molly Masters, Age 25 appeared first on TechRound.
Molly McCann submitted by Erin Blanchfield in the first round at UFC 281
UFC 281: Brit Molly McCann has win streak shattered by Erin Blanchfield thanks to bone crushing kimura at MSG
MOLLY MCCANN’s surge up the flyweight division came to a screeching halt at Madison Square Garden.
Meatball locked horns with the highly-rated Erin Blanchfield early on Sunday morning on the prelims of a stacked UFC 281 at MSG in New York.
Molly McCann locked horns with Erin Blanchfield on the UFC 281 prelims[/caption]
The Liverpudlian looked to stretch her octagon win streak to four at MSG but was quickly taken down[/caption]
Blanchfield’s grappling was too much for McCann, who she put in a mounted crucifix[/caption]
A dogged and determined McCann was forced to submit to a crushing kimura in the first round[/caption]
The Liverpudlian entered the bout in the form of her octagon career following spectacular stoppage victories over Luana Carolina and Hannah Goldy.
But she was stopped in her tracks by surging 125lb prospect Blanchfield – who made it four wins on the bounce with a submission victory courtesy of a nasty kimura.
An elated Blanchfield said of silencing the pro-McCann crowd: “It felt really good [ to shut it down].
“And I think that was worth 50k.”
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There was no glove touch to kick off the eagerly-anticipated flyweight showdown.
McCann put the pressure on early and looked to land her powerful straight right hand.
It didn’t take long for Blanchfield to shoot for a takedown, which she got thanks to a beautiful level change after perfectly timing a right hand from McCann.
The American moved into side control and began dropping short strikes as she looked to advance her position.
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Advance position she did as she trapped the Liverpudlian’s arms in a mounted crucifix.
Crushing blow after crushing blow began to rain down from Blanchfield, although the ref showed no interest in stopping the contest.
McCann tried her best to buck the top-heavy Blanchfield off but had little success.
Erin Blanchfield celebrates her biggest win inside the octagon[/caption]
Blanchfield soon opted to change tack, spotting an opening for a kimura atte,pt
McCann bravely, and perhaps dangerously, refused to tap to the bone-snapping submission.
But she was forced to a few moments later when Blanchfield stepped over and put even more crushing pressure on her arm.
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Blanchfield, 23, said of the finish: “I was definitely surprised he [the referee] didn’t stop it I was throwing so many punches.
“She was still moving, but she wasn’t fully there. But I think it could’ve been stopped earlier.”
Court finds Meta, Pinterest culpable in suicide of U.K. teen Molly Russell
Meta, Pinterest, and other social media platforms are legally to blame for the death of 14-year-old Molly Russell, according to the senior coroner at the coroner’s court of North London. The ruling concerning Russell, who died as a result of self-harm in November 2017, came on Friday, Sept. 30.
A British coroner is a figure with broad authority to investigate and determine a person’s cause of death. This was not a criminal or civil trial, and Pinterest and Meta do not face penalties as a result. Russell’s family pursued the case against the two tech giants to raise awareness of the dangers of social media content accessible to young people.
Russell created an Instagram at age 12 with her parent’s permission and received an iPhone as a 13th birthday present. Before her death, Russell’s parents say she had been acting like a normal teenager: listening to pop music, watching Netflix, and texting friends. She was excited to be in an upcoming school play. Some gloomier moments earlier in the year had not rung any alarm bells, and could be chalked up to normal adolescent mood swings.
But two weeks after Russell died, her father found an email from Pinterest called “Depression Pins you may like.” On Russell’s Instagram account he found a folder titled “Unimportant things” with dozens of unsettling images and quotes, including one that read “Who would love a suicidal girl?”
Mr. Russell went public with his daughter’s story in January 2019 in an interview with the BBC. Meta eventually agreed to provide more than 16,000 pages from Molly Russell’s Instagram, which took more than 1,000 hours for the family’s legal team to review before being presented in court. About 2,100 of those posts were related to suicide, self-harm and depression, according to data that Meta disclosed to her family. Many of those posts used hashtags that linked to other explicit content and encouraged hiding mental emotional distress.
The New York Times reports that the material was so disturbing that a courtroom worker left the room to avoid viewing a set of Instagram videos depicting suicide. A child psychologist who served as an expert witness said that reviewing the material that Russell viewed was so “disturbing” and “distressing” that he lost sleep for weeks.
Elizabeth Lagone, Meta’s head of health and well-being policy, appeared in court. Lagone was read a post that Russell had seen on Instagram, then heard how she had copied its wording in a self-loathing note later found by her parents. “This is Instagram literally giving Molly ideas,” said Oliver Sanders, a lawyer representing the family.
Ms. Lagone said she regretted that Russell had seen such distressing content but that it was important for the platform to allow users to express unhappy feelings openly as “a cry for help.” Jud Hoffman, the head of community operations at Pinterest, said his platform was “not safe” during the time Molly was on it and that he “deeply regrets” and apologizes for the material Molly had viewed. For its part, Pinterest has invested significant resources in culling and suppressing harmful content since 2018.
A draft law called the “Online Safety Bill” is currently making its way through Britain’s Parliament and is partially inspired by Russell and her family. It calls for a “new duty of care” on the part of online platforms towards their users, and lays out fines for sites unable to remove harmful content.
“Anyone who knew Molly was looking forward to the way that she would grow up, to the person she would become,” her father told the BBC. “She had so much to offer, and that’s gone…with the help of the internet and social media.”
If you’re feeling suicidal or experiencing a mental health crisis, please talk to somebody. You can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988; the Trans Lifeline at 877-565-8860; or the Trevor Project at 866-488-7386. Text “START” to Crisis Text Line at 741-741. Contact the NAMI HelpLine at 1-800-950-NAMI, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m. ET, or email info@nami.org. If you don’t like the phone, consider using the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline Chat at crisischat.org. Here is a list of international resources.