Thursday, February 28, 2013

Jennifer Lawrence's heated call after being caught smoking a suspicious roll-up cigarette

Jennifer Lawrence's heated call after being caught smoking a suspicious roll-up cigarette

  • Seen smoking on balcony and drinking wine during Hawaiian holiday
  • Got into an argument on the phone just hours after photos were taken

By Sarah Fitzmaurice, Donna Mcconnell and Iona Kirby

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Jennifer Lawrence has been photographed smoking a suspicious rolled up cigarette while on holiday in Hawaii.

And it seems the Oscar-winning actress may have been reprimanded for her wild ways as she was spotted having a very heated phone conversation hours later.

The 22-year-old was seen on her balcony, visibly shouting down the phone to the unknown person at the end of the line.

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Not happy: Jennifer Lawrence was seen having a heated phone conversation in Hawaii on Wednesday

Not happy: Jennifer Lawrence was seen having a heated phone conversation in Hawaii on Wednesday

In trouble?: It came just hours after the star was photographed smoking a suspicious roll-up cigarette

In trouble?: It came just hours after the star was photographed smoking a suspicious roll-up cigarette

The Silver Linings Playbook star was seen gesticulating ferociously, pointing at herself and the floor while pacing around and pursing her lips.

At one point Jennifer appeared to have grown a little resigned, and put her head in her hands while resting her elbow on the balcony railings.

She was still dressed in the grey Reformation T-shirt and black tracksuit bottoms she had worn for her smoke break earlier, but had since scraped her newly dark locks into a messy bun.

Not holding back: The 22-year-old was seen gesticulating and pointing at herself and at the floor

Resigned: At one point Jennifer rested her head in her hands as she took the call on her hotel balcony

Resigned: At one point Jennifer rested her head in her hands as she took the call on her hotel balcony

So much for a rest: Jennifer had been enjoying a relaxing day before the conversation changed everything

So much for a rest: Jennifer had been enjoying a relaxing day before the conversation changed everything

The Hunger Games beauty was pictured clasping the cigarette in her fingers and a bottle of wine, and also seen taking a draw on the roll-up.

It may come as some surprise just days after the actress was seen lapping up the applause of her peers at the Academy Awards where she took home the Best Actress award for her stunning turn in Silver Linings Playbook.

Strained: A very angry Hunger Games star pursed her lips as she paced around impatiently during the phone call

Strained: A very angry Hunger Games star pursed her lips as she paced around impatiently during the phone call

Keeping comfortable: The actress was make-up free and wearing a T-shirt and tracksuit bottoms with her newly dark locks scraped into a messy bun

Although she freely admitted she was starting to feel depressed as she readied ending the high of her awards season wins and concentrating on a full year of work.

So it could be she was making sure she felt relaxed before throwing herself back into her schedule.

She told E! on the Oscars red carpet: 'I want to sit on my couch and drink and not change my pants for days at a time... Don't ask me about my schedule because I'm sinking into a bit of depression.'

Jennifer looked happy and relaxed, which may well have been in part thanks to a glass of wine and her cheeky smoke.

It's not clear if she was indeed smoking marijuana - but the actress is not known to be a smoker - and if the young starlet does have a penchant for the weed, it may explain her propensity for stumbling.

Party time: Jennifer is seen enjoying a suspicious looking rolled up cigarette as she holidays in Hawaii

Party time: Jennifer is seen enjoying a suspicious looking rolled up cigarette as she holidays in Hawaii

Smoke and mirrors: Oscar winner Jennifer was seen enjoying the roll up on the balcony of her hotel

qBarefoot beauty: The dark haired star was having some downtime following her busy awards season

Barefoot beauty: The dark haired star was having some downtime following her busy awards season

Jennifer is in Hawaii for Catching Fire reshoots, and was joined by a female friend who she was seen hugging as they sat on the balcony together.

Her girl pal wore a pair of heart-print pyjama shorts and a grey vest and both women were make-up free.

Jennifer will no doubt be enjoying her moment after scooping Best Actress at The Oscars.

She's so caring: Jennifer and a friend were seen hugging as they sat on a balcony in Hawaii

She's so caring: Jennifer and a friend were seen hugging as they sat on a balcony in Hawaii

Close friends: The girls were seen hugging it out after enjoying their wine together, as they sun set in the backdrop

Raise a glass: Jennifer relaxed on the balcony by bringing out a bottle of red wine

Raise a glass: Jennifer relaxed on the balcony by bringing out a bottle of red wine

Relaxing: The 22-year-old actress shared a bottle of wine and a suspicious-looking cigarette with her friend

Just chilling: The 22-year-old actress shared a bottle of wine and a suspicious-looking cigarette with her friend

Jennifer won herself even more fans after laughing at herself after tripping up on the stairs after being named Best Actress.

'Thank you so much,' she told them. 'This is nuts. You guys are only standing up because I fell and you feel bad. That was embarrassing.'

The day after her big award win Jennifer was seen visiting a hair salon in Beverly Hills to dye her hair back to black.

Oops! The actress fell as she walkrf up the steps to accept the award for Best Actress for her role in Silver Linings Playbook at the Oscars on Sunday

Oops! The actress fell as she walkrf up the steps to accept the award for Best Actress for her role in Silver Linings Playbook at the Oscars on Sunday

Busy week: Sunday night Lawrence won her Oscar, left, and Monday had her hair dyed black in Beverly Hills before jetting off to Hawaii where she was pictured on Wednesday

Malfunction: Jennifer's dress fell apart as she collected her award for Best Female Actor in Film at the Screen Actors Guild awards

Malfunction: Jennifer's dress fell apart as she collected her award for Best Female Actor in Film at the Screen Actors Guild awards


'I'll never see her smile, and that's too much to bear': One woman's account of losing the baby she longed for

'I'll never see her smile, and that's too much to bear': One woman's account of losing the baby she longed for

  • After a fraught pregnancy, Rebecca Evans lost her daughter at 22 weeks
  • 'Incompetent' cervix meant her body prepared for labour months early

By Rebecca Evans

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Rebecca Evans pictured at Christmas 2012, one month before the still birth

Rebecca Evans pictured at Christmas 2012, one month before the still birth

For hours I had lain awake. The pains in my stomach kept coming in telltale waves, but I refused to accept their origin. It was the early hours of a freezing January morning, and I had not slept all night.

In order not to wake my husband, who I knew had a busy day at work ahead, I moved to another bed. But the agony would not abate.

After three hours, terrified and alone, I was forced to phone the hospital. It was a call that would signal the beginning of the end of my life as I knew it. A brutal halt to my elation at becoming a mother for the first time.

For, deep down, I knew that at just 22 weeks into my pregnancy, I was going into labour â€" and my baby girl, my little Marianne, was just too young to survive.

Despite major technological advances in ante-natal care, there is still little known about why so many healthy babies die as mine did â€" why 17 women every day have a stillborn child.

Despite this startling statistic, the subject remains a taboo, something to be swept under the carpet. And this secrecy only deepens the feeling that you’ve done something wrong, that you’re somehow to blame.

My husband, Adrian, a 34-year-old management accountant, and I had been married for seven years before I fell pregnant last August at the age of 31. I had been lucky enough to conceive straight away after we decided to start a family, and had

been filled with such excitement for our future.

But right from the start, my pregnancy was fraught.

 At six weeks, I started to bleed and was told I had a huge benign tumour called a fibroid and that the pregnancy was ectopic: the baby had apparently implanted in my fallopian tube rather than my uterus.

I grieved for my baby then, but within weeks it emerged the doctors were wrong and she was fine.

The relief I felt when Marianne’s heartbeat was picked up for the first time is indescribable. I sobbed and stared in pure wonderment at the scan showing the little life growing inside me.

It was â€" and still is â€" my greatest achievement to date.

But during the following months, I continued to suffer pains and heavy bleeding. Each time, I would go to hospital, only to be sent home after a quick scan showed my baby’s heart was beating.

No one explained why the pains were happening, nor did they seem particularly concerned. Yet I couldn’t shake the terror that something wasn’t right.

Dissatisfied and anxious, I tried to find some answers but was dismissed by my GP (who refused to refer me to a consultant) and every other medic I saw as worrying about nothing.

Finally, after seeking private medical advice, I was diagnosed with a short cervix, meaning my body was getting ready to go into labour months before my due date.

Back home, I took to the internet and discovered that the medical term for my condition is an ‘incompetent’ cervix; not a very comforting phrase.

It felt like a judgment, confirming my inadequacy as a woman.

Surely, my purpose in life is not to have friends, to travel or do my job as a journalist, but to be a mother? That’s what my body was made for, so why couldn’t it carry out this task which is performed by billions of women all over the world?

After a fraught pregnancy Rebecca was diagnosed with an incompetent cervix which leads to early labour

After a fraught pregnancy Rebecca was diagnosed with an incompetent cervix which leads to early labour

Within a fortnight of my diagnosis in early December, I had a stitch placed in my cervix in a bid to keep my baby girl inside me for long enough. It was an invasive and complicated procedure that came with the risk of miscarriage.

I later discovered that to be most effective, the stitch should be inserted within the first ten weeks of pregnancy, but because of the delays, and the dozens of ineffectual NHS hospital scans and appointments I had attended, it was now my 18th week.

The private consultant I saw couldn’t hide his horror that it hadn’t happened sooner. He told me to go on bed rest, to stop working and to move as little as possible to give my baby the best chance that I could.

After the operation, every day that passed felt like a victory. I prayed and wrote letters to my baby, dreaming of the day I could cuddle her for the first time.


'It felt like a judgment, confirming my inadequacy as a woman.'

I had already named her â€" as soon as I had found out she was a girl, at around 14 weeks, I chose the name ‘Marianne’, inspired by the character in Jane Austen’s Sense And Sensibility. To me, she was Austen’s most vibrant and ebullient character, and I hoped my daughter would be just like her.

Worried that it would tempt fate, I did not buy anything for my unborn child. I did, however, allow myself to commission a woodland scene mural to be painted on her nursery wall â€" something, in the end, which was never even started. The cervical stitch held for one month before that dreadful day in January.

On the phone to the hospital, while Adrian slept, I was fobbed off once again. The midwife seemed unconcerned and told me not to worry, to take some paracetamol and wait until morning.

But I knew that if I went into labour, my stitch would tear and I would haemorrhage, with potentially life-threatening consequences.

I explained this to the bored, nameless voice at the end of the phone, but she didn’t seem to care.

At around 4am, I took a bath to ease the pain, which is when my world started to fall apart.

Rebecca said her husband Adrian had been her rock through the tragedy

Rebecca said her husband Adrian had been her rock through the tragedy

A stream of water gushed from inside me. I knew instantly that it was the special cushion of liquid that had been keeping my baby safe, letting her swim and kick and grow.

My husband heard me screaming, something I didn’t even know I was doing. It must have been a primeval and instinctive response. Somehow I must have known that my baby, my little Marianne, was going to die.

Barely dressed, we drove in a daze to our local hospital in West London.

Just a few days earlier, I had been there for a scan and had been told that everything was fine with  my baby.

I had seen he r kicking and covering her face with her hands, as a kind female sonographer had tried to take pictures of her. I had marvelled at the clear outline of her lips and nose.

That fateful morning, new scans showed my baby, still alive, her heart beating strong and clearly.

But there was no amniotic water left and Marianne’s body was slumped, helpless and unable to move without it. I was told she would not develop and even if we made it to 24 weeks â€" the earliest age a hospital will try to save a premature baby â€" she could not survive being born so early.

How had this happened? Just the morning before, I had been looking at prams, dreaming of taking my little girl to ballet class, thinking about good primary schools near our home in Ealing, West London.

As I had embraced Adrian on his return from work, I had imagined him picking up our little girl and giving her a kiss, what a wonderful father he was going to be. 

Back at the hospital, I was given my own room with a double bed so that Adrian and I could be together. Despite this much-needed privacy, I could still hear the constant screams of women giving birth around me, followed by the miraculous sound of their baby crying for the very first time. It felt so unfair â€" why couldn’t that be us?

After my cervical stitch was removed, a harrowing and painful experience in itself, I was asked how long I wanted to leave it before I was induced.

 'My beautiful little Marianne who will never go to ballet class, school or university.'

I didn’t really understand what was happening, but I knew I didn’t want to delay if there was any chance my baby was in pain.

I was told that wouldn’t be the case because her nerve endings hadn’t yet developed, but do they really know that? How could they be sure?

I was kept in hospital and 36 hours after my waters had broken, I felt the contractions start again.

Unlike a normal birth, my agony and anguish was to be for nothing; my baby, if alive on being born, would die soon afterwards.

Thankfully, the midwife was incredible, keeping me calm and helping me stay focused. Eventually, at 6.50pm on January 25, Marianne Grace Evans was born.

I lay in a sweat and blood-drenched daze, clasping the hands of my mother and Adrian, who had rubbed my back and soothed me with words of love and support throughout.

The midwife rushed my baby’s body away, and when she returned she told me Marianne had died during the labour.

Rebecca did not buy any baby items because she had been terrified of losing Marianne

Rebecca did not buy any baby items because she had been terrified of losing Marianne

At the time, I did not want to see my daughter. I don’t know why â€" maybe I was in shock.

But two days later, after being released from hospital, I changed my mind.

Having never seen a dead body before, I was worried what to expect â€" would I be haunted for the rest of my life?

But I had agreed for the hospital to carry out a post-mortem examination so if I didn’t seize the chance then, I would never know what my daughter â€" my first and only child â€" had looked like.

Adrian and I were taken to a room where Marianne lay in a Moses bask et, covered in a pink blanket.

I needn’t have worried â€" she was just perfect, with dark hair, lips like Adrian’s and a flat, fat nose like mine. She was so very, very beautiful .?.?. just tiny.

That was the first time Adrian truly broke down. We sobbed and held each other, wrought with grief and despair.

I could have stayed in that room for ever, staring at my little baby girl â€" my beautiful little Marianne who will never go to ballet class, school or university.

She will never have a first kiss, get married or have children of her own. I will never hear her cry or laugh. I will never see her smile. It was just too much to bear.

She had been dressed by one of the nurses in a tiny, white knitted bonnet and jacket, such a wonderful thing for someone to have done.

I was filled with such sadness that this little outfit would be the only one my daughter would ever wear â€" there would be no Babygros or party dresses.

The following days were a blur. Guilt as well as grief cloaked me. I felt less of a woman, as though I’d fulfilled the doctor’s diagnosis of ‘incompetence’.


 'How had this happened? Just the morning before, I had been looking at prams...'

I felt as though I’d let down my parents, who’d been so excited about the impending birth of their granddaughter â€" the clothes and toys they had bought in preparation are now shameful reminders of my failure.

But, more importantly, I felt as though I had let my husband down by failing to carry our child for long enough.

To make matters worse, a week later my milk came. I woke up in the night drenched, and it broke my heart even more. I kept thinking about how Marianne’s lips would never suckle at my breast, how this futile substance was just another reminder of my body’s ‘incompetence’.

I was told by the hospital that because Marianne had been born before 24 weeks â€" ‘the age of viability’ â€" I did not have to register her death, because what I had been through was classed as a late miscarriage, not stillbirth, something that seemed so arbitrary and cruel. In the U.S., the cut-off point is 2 0 weeks.

Two weeks after Marianne’s birth, we held a small, simple funeral. We scattered her ashes in the bluebell woods at Kew Gardens, on the snowdrop-covered soil beneath a beech tree.

It has been just over a month since she died, and I still feel sadness whenever I see a baby.

I’m tortured by thoughts of how life could have been, how Marianne would have grown. It is something I am steeling myself to deal with.

Maybe in time, we will try to have another baby, but I am terrified it could happen again. I hope I can, somehow, prove my diagnosis wrong, and fulfil the role I know I’m meant to have: that of a mother.

Throughout it all, Adrian has been my rock, and our marriage is stronger than ever. I just pray that one day, we will know happier times.

To The Wonder left little to ponder and a lot to be desired

To The Wonder left little to ponder and a lot to be desired

By Chris Tookey

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TO THE WONDER (12A)

Verdict: Not wonderful Turkey

Rating:  Star Rating

It’s a wonder that To The Wonder ever found a release. Terrence Malick’s long, lugubrious film is a prolonged exercise in directorial self-pleasuring.

Such story as it has concerns a blank-faced American (Ben Affleck reverting to useless lumpishness) bringing a lively, beautiful French girl (Olga Kurylenko) back to live with him in Oklahoma, where unsurprisingly she succumbs to boredom and discontent.

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Its certainly not Argo: To the Wonder stars Ben Affleck and Rachel McAdams

Its certainly not Argo: To the Wonder stars Ben Affleck and Rachel McAdams

Their Catholic priest (Javier Bardem) trudges around like a morose bloodhound, looking despairing, as though longing for someone, anyone, to toss him a morsel of intelligent dialogue. He seems to be struggling with something: it could be a crisis of faith, but it might equally well be haemorrhoids.

The French girl goes home, possibly to try for better luck with Jean Luc Godard, and Affleck embarks on an affair with a childhood sweetheart (Rachel McAdams) before that, too, founders in the rock of his frozen-faced inertia.

There’s more to come after that, but nothing of any interest, and my advice would be to bale out before the end and do something more culturally rewarding, such as stare at your ceiling for a couple of hours.

I’m sure this film is meant to feature universal characters and reflect years of deep thought and spiritual awakening. All I can say is that it conveys none of these things.

After this and The Tree of Life, there can be no doubt that the once fashionable Malick has turned into the world’s most insufferable bore. 

Now watch the trailer

'My weight will definitely be up there': Kim Kardashian predicts she'll pile on pounds during pregnancy as she heads to the gym

'My weight will definitely be up there': Kim Kardashian predicts she'll pile on pounds during pregnancy as she heads to the gym

By Daily Mail Reporter

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Kim Kardashian thinks she will gain a lot of weight during her pregnancy - but she's doing her best to keep her curves in check.

The 32-year-old reality TV star - who is due to give birth a baby girl in early July with her rapper boyfriend of almost a year Kanye West - was spotted heading to the gym on Thursday.

I'm ready for a work-out, baby! Kim Kardashian arrived for an exercise session in LA on Thursday

Keeping up with Kim: The brunette has maintained her gym routine during her pregnancy

Keeping up with Kim: The brunette has maintained her gym routine during her pregnancy

She kept her figure covered in a baggy lumberjack shirt, which she wore over her all black fitness attire. 

The reality TV star has always worked hard to keep in shape, with her weight fluctuating over the years.

While she has been keeping up a healthy exercise routine during her pregnancy, she still predicts she'll pile on the pounds.

'I'll definitely be up there,' she told the April issue of Cosmopolitan magazine while discussing her pregnancy weight.

Covering up: The reality TV star wore a lumberjack shirt over her fitness gear and had a top tied around her waist

Covering up: The reality TV star wore a lumberjack shirt over her fitness gear and had a top tied around her waist

She's been experimental with her maternity fashion, and was particularly pleased with an outfit she wore yesterday from the Karshian collection.

When a Twitter fan complimented a picture of her in a yellow and grey dress on Wednesday, she responded: 'Sears baby! Wow I look skinny haha!'

Kim admitted to Cosmopolitan that she is dreading giving up her heels in the coming months.

'I look skinny!': Kim told Twitter fans she was pleased with the flattering results of the Kardashian Kollection dress she wore to lunch on Wednesday

She said: 'I'm trying to prep myself for when I'm extremely pregnant, so I wore a wedge sneaker. I didn't feel it; I'm not gonna lie. I can't. But I'm trying.'

The couple's baby was conceived during a surprise trip to Italy in October and Kim said that despite still being married to her estranged husband Kris Humphries, who she has accused of purposely dragging out their divorce for almost 18 months since their marriage ended after 72-days in November 2011, she thinks the timing is perfect.

She said: 'I've always said that I wanted kids, but I don't think I ever would have been ready until now.'


Pippa Middleton is box office poison, Jan Moir warns Waitrose

Pippa Middleton is box office poison, Jan Moir warns Waitrose

Replace Delia? The only thing P-Middy makes for dinner is restaurant reservations

By Jan Moir

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Holy haddock soufflés! Pippa Middleton, everyone’s favourite half-baked food author, has just become the new face of Waitrose. How on earth could this have happened? The sister of the Duchess of Cambridge (big clue there), whose previous number one claim to fame was being a bridesmaid and bending over nicely, has been signed up to write a column for Waitrose Kitchen, the upmarket supermarket’s monthly magazine.

She will appear on the front of the magazine’s April issue, when the column will first be unveiled to a panting nation, desperate for any new tips on how to serve breakfast in bed (use a tray) or the correct method of serving tea at a tea party.

‘The teabags should go into a pot, rather than individually in mugs,’ is her previously published advice. She adds that loose-leaf tea is less practical and only connoisseurs (‘like my tea-loving brother’) notice the difference. Lower orders please note, drink ing from the saucer is never acceptable. 

Not something to Celebrate: Pippa's book had poor sales

Not something to Celebrate: Pippa's book had poor sales

Pippa has promised that her new engagement is ‘an exciting opportunity to share my own passion for food and entertaining and I can’t wait to get started’.

To this end, her new monthly column will be called Pippa’s Friday Night Feasts and will share her ‘exclusive’ tips and recipes on how to celebrate the start of the weekend with friends in style.

OK. Big problem right there. Surely most Waitrose shoppers start the weekend by crawling home from work exhausted, with barely the strength left to uncork a bottle of Chateau D’Espair and shout at the kids.

Just taking a wild guess here, but perhaps the last thing millions of supermarket customers need by 8pm on a Friday is some glossy, rich, well-connected socialite fresh from the slopes of Zermatt â€" via a winter beach holiday in Mustique â€" telling them to set up a martini bar in the corner of the sitting room for guests, then head to the kitchen to debone some cod loins to make a fish pie for them. As if.

Pippa’s a really sweet girl, but she always looks like she might swoon away in a dead faint if ever presented with a dirty saucepan or an unpeeled grape. For the classic Waitrose shoppers â€" those post-family older couples, the working parents, the 45-plus women who love Waitrose more than life itself and peruse its w ell-stocked aisles nearly every day (or is that just me?) â€" it’s all rather insulting.

How much more can we take? The hard-working, budget-stretched, economically battered, horsemeat-eating hordes just might find that being lectured on the finer points of table placement and party nibbles by 29-year-old Miss Middleton is one indignity too far.

For since she first appeared in butter satin at the royal wedding in 2011, Pippa Middleton has struck absolutely no one as the kind of girl who is always in the kitchen at parties.

Since she first appeared in butter satin at the royal wedding in 2011, Pippa Middleton has struck absolutely no one as the kind of girl who is always in the kitchen at parties

Driving through Paris with gun-toting playboys, a regular fixture at society weddings, a seasoned skier on the Swiss slopes? Hate to say it, but her jet-set lifestyle always suggests that the only thing Pippa ever really makes for dinner are restaurant reservations.

Yet despite this, Waitrose is promoting her as ‘a woman with a wealth of experience of entertaining’, but that is fooling nobody. Marie Antoinette had a wealth of experience of entertaining. So do Silvio Berlusconi, Hannibal Lecter and Posh Spice, but no one is asking them for tips on prawn cocktails, herb garnishes and napkin folding any time soon.

'Undaunted by the Celebrate setback, Pippa's emergence as the face of Waitrose shows she is determined to be the new domestic goddess no matter what'

P-Middy as a food columnist? This is just the kind of news to make you choke on a cup of parsnip soup espresso, the recipe for which is on page 130 of Pippa’s steaming great floperoo of a book, Celebrate.

Despite the royal sister-in-law being given a reputed £400,000 advance by publishers Penguin last year, Celebrate will surely go down in history as the guide to entertaining that failed to entertain. 

Indeed, its very failure seemed to suggest that the British public were entirely resistant to the notion of a pampered nobody cashing in on her royal connections by exhorting them to make tissue-paper pom-poms at Christmas and spinach roulades for picnics. Whatever the culinary opposite of cat nip is, she is it.

Despite a great deal of interest and a lovely serialisation in a Sunday newspaper, the 416-page Celebrate sold only a few thousand copies, while Pippa’s infantile instructions and pedestrian writ ing became a laughing stock. Some of her most elementary tips on entertaining have already become the stuff of legend, including her urgings to build a bonfire for Bonfire Night, store cakes in an airtight tin to keep them fresh and serve baked potatoes ‘with a fork’.

To this we can add more gems, such as the Pippa-patented correct method to slice a sandwich with a bread knife (‘with a single up and down cutting motion’), how to make macaroons (‘quite a fiddle, I recommend buying them from a good bakery’), while her tip for ending a romantic Valentine’s evening a deux is to ‘switch off the television to play cards or a board game’.

Suitable replacement? Pippa's new role comes after Delia Smith parted ways with Waitrose

Suitable replacement? Pippa's new role comes after Delia Smith parted ways with Waitrose

No wonder she’s still single!

However, undaunted by the Celebrate setback, Pippa’s emergence as the face of Waitrose shows she is determined to be the new domestic goddess no matter what.

Make no mistake, Pippa’s mission creep is under way, ounce by ounce, slice by slice, inch by column inch. Recently, there have been some subtle but strategic developments on her make-me-a-star front.

WHO KNEW?

Delia Smith's Complete Cookery Course was published in 1982 and has sold more than two million copies worldwide

On the Middleton family’s Party Pieces website, the company has started using Pippa’s name and image to promote key products. That’s a first.

And note that Miss Middleton appears on the Waitrose scene just weeks after Delia Smith quit her high-profile, two-year association with the company.

So as one stately galleon sails through the Waitrose exit doors into the cookery sunset, trailing cranberry and nutmeggy fumes in her wake, she is replaced by a sleek-bodied royal-ish yacht with no mileage on the clock but plenty of pep in her engine. Vrooom!

To date, Pippa’s only credentials seem to be a stint at a party planning company in London, where she claims to have worked ‘for three years’.

She also undertook a four-week essential cookery course at The Grange cookery school in Somerset, a place which specialises in turning out cooks for ‘chalets and galleys’.

Course instructor Jane Averill remembers Pippa as a student who was ‘hard-working, smiley and lovely’ and whose menu planning suggestions were ‘more than nice’.

Cover star: The Duchess of Cambridge's sister will have a regular column in the supermarket magazine

Cover star: The Duchess of Cambridge's sister will have a regular column in the supermarket magazine

To be fair to Pippa, this does make her slightly more qualified than both Nigella and Delia combined when they started out on their foodie path to fame â€" although Delia did have the grace to work her way up and unstoppable Nigella was blessed with originality, style and wit.


 
   

More from Jan Moir...

In contrast, mouse-like Pippa has yet to speak in public and her advice for home entertaining (‘buy a bunch of fresh flowers for a side table’) make her not much more than a chalet girl with connections. Yet what does that matter?

A number of cooking stars are mere figureheads; attractive personalities who have a vague grasp of cooking techniques but who manage to form themselves into a lucrative foodie brand, shored up by home economics experts who dream up and test their ‘exclusive’ recipes.

So it is hard to believe for a second that, in between holidays, Pippa Middleton dreamed up, conceived and tested the myriad recipes in her own book, including ones for pork terrine, potted shrimps, simnel cake, salmon and prawn pillows, Cornish pasties, haggis croustades, ice cream sandcastle cake and the rest.

However, this is only the beginning. Can a TV career be far behind? Pippa is given to never looking in to the camera and gazing off into the distance.

That doesn’t bode well. Neither does her discreet reticence to spill the borlotti on the royal eating habits, which is of course her unique selling point.

Exactly when can we expect some juicy revelations about what the Queen puts in her shepherd’s pie and what Kate and William enjoy for supper? 

In her column, Pippa Middleton will have to prove that she has something more than royal connections and a pretty smile to fall back on.

She will have to demonstrate she is an interesting personality with something contemporary and fresh to say every month about food and entertaining.

Until then, she remains defined by what she is not, rather than what she is. Which is not a chef, not an expert and not really to be taken seriously.

ST DELIA vs HER ROYAL HOTNESS

VENISON CASSEROLE

Pippa’s venison and beetroot stew

For this recipe, Pippa relies on stewed beetroot. There’s something about stewed beetroot that simply doesn’t appeal. Roasted beetroot, lovely. But stewed?…?it just sounds plain nasty.

Still, this stew has lots of other flavour. Pippa uses juniper, thyme, pink peppercorns, bay, orange, red onions, caramelised shallots and (if that lot isn’t enough for you) half a bottle each of red wine and port. Blimey! I suppose the alcohol content would appeal to Prince Harry, if no one else.
Indeed, Pippa doesn’t reduce this mixture at all, so the alcohol flavour is going to be pretty strong. Unpleasantly so, I’d say.

Pippa starts her stew by tossing the venison cubes in a whacking eight tablespoons of flour â€" this is a lot of flour. This stew will be sitting in a very thick sauce. Pippa instructs us to ‘brown the venison, in batches if necessary, until evenly coloured’.

The truth is, if you don’t know what you are doing h ere, you are going to ruin your stew. The meat needs to be really well browned to a deep caramel colour, or the stew will look grey and taste insipid.

And it definitely needs to be browned in batches â€" there’s no ‘if necessary’ about it.
There’s 1.3kg of venison here, and overcrowding the pan will make the meat sweat (yuck) and go grey rather than brown.

Further problems could come, too, with all that flour. If you use that much, it can catch and burn really easily.

If Pippa has made this stew before, why didn’t she spell out these important instructions more clearly?

Delia’s braised venison with bacon, chestnuts and wild mushrooms in a rich Madeira sauce

For a start, this sounds more appealing to me â€" bacon, chestnuts and wild mushrooms versus stewed beetroot? It’s no battle. My mouth’s watering just reading Delia’s recipe. Her list of ingredients is far shorter, too, and her instructions are much clearer than Pippa’s.

When she talks about browning the cubes of venison, Delia tells us: ‘Keeping the heat high, brown the cubes of meat about six at a time, removing them to join the (already fried) onions as you go.’
Potential grey meat disasters averted. Even a beginner will get this right: which is, of course, what makes Delia great.

Delia also uses far less flour â€" just a teaspoon sprinkled in â€" with a pint of Madeira, creating a rich sauce that will not be gloopy or mask the other ingredients. Sorry Pippa, Delia’s recipe wins hands down.

 

TRIFLE

Pippa’s Easter trifle

Here, Pippa offers a twist on the classic trifle. Now, I have no problem with twists â€" I love Nigella’s chocolate cherry trifle, for instance â€" but this does not work for me.

Basically, you layer up toasted cubes of hot cross buns drizzled with dry sherry, top them with a can of mandarins, add a layer of orange jelly cut into ‘thin slices or cubes’ and finish with custard, cream and chocolate Mini Eggs.

I’m sorry Pippa, but I don’t want to eat soggy hot cross buns with dry sherry and jelly slices. It’s all wrong. Just give me the rest of that packet of Mini Eggs, please.

Delia’s summer trifle with raspberries and raspberry puree

This is another assembly job â€" a quick trifle made by layering up ready-made ingredients â€" but it works. Cut your trifle sponges in half, sandwich them back together with raspberry jam. Cut each sponge into three little sandwiches.

Stab them and pour over Madeira (that’s sweet wine, Pippa) and leave to soak for half an hour.

Scatter over raspberries and a raspberry puree you have whizzed up in a food processor. Whisk together custard and mascarpone, spoon over the top and sprinkle with flaked almonds. Delicious. And really easy. Phew.

Michelle Williams oozes style on the yellow carpet at London Oz premiere... but Mila Kunis swamps herself in large rag like gown

Michelle Williams oozes style on the yellow carpet at London Oz premiere... but Mila Kunis swamps herself in large rag like gown

By Kimberley Dadds

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They've so far been head-to-head in the style war as they launch their promotional storm of new movie, Oz: The Great And Powerful.

But it was Michelle Williams who came out shining over her co-star Mila Kunis on Thursday night as they premiered the movie in London.

The Brokeback Mountain star dazzled in her emerald frock as she walked the 'Yellow Brick Road' in place of the usual red carpet.

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Emerald Queen: Michelle Williams wins in the fashion stakes as she shows up to the London premiere of movie Oz: The Great And Powerful on Thursday evening

Emerald Queen: Michelle Williams wins in the fashion stakes as she shows up to the London premiere of movie Oz: The Great And Powerful on Thursday evening

Style war: Michelle Williams stunned in her strapless aqua frock while Mila stepped out in the rag like gown for the screening

Too much: The tiered ruffles swamped Mila's tiny frame

Too much: The tiered ruffles swamped Mila's tiny frame

But while she oozed style in her strapless gown her fellow star Mila had an unusual fashion faux pas as she managed to swamp her tiny figure in a large Alexander McQueen dress.

The actresses were joined by their co-stars Rachel Weisz, Zach Braff and James Franco.

Rachel went for a timeless elegance in a strapless cream Michael Kors dress, with her brunette hair tied back into a chic updo.

Bright and breezy: The newly single star stood out as she posed for the photographers and waiting fans at The Empire in Leicester Square

Timeless elegance: Rachel Weisz looked stunning in a strapless cream Michael Kors creation

Timeless elegance: Rachel Weisz looked stunning in a strapless cream Michael Kors creation

Strapless ladies: Michelle and Mila were also joine3d by Rachel Weisz, who similarly went for a sleeveless gown for the lavish outing

Strapless ladies: Michelle and Mila were also joine3d by Rachel Weisz, who similarly went for a sleeveless gown for the lavish outing

Also in attendance was model Danielle O'Hara, who revealed this week she was expecting her third child, and X Factor contestant Jade Ellis.

Earlier on Thursday, the actresses were spotted showing off their opposing casual dress as they arrived in London after flying in from Russia.

Mobbed: Michelle signed autographs for fans who had patiently waited in Leicester Square

Mobbed: Michelle signed autographs for fans who had patiently waited in Leicester Square

Here come the boys: James Franco (left) and Zach Braff (right) both opted for grey suits

Magic four: James plays the Wizard of Oz with her stunning co-stars as the three witches

Magic four: James plays the Wizard of Oz with her stunning co-stars as the three witches

Michelle, 32, was the chicer of the two in a beige trenchcoat and skinny black jeans .

She gave a quirky twist to her ensemble with a £465 pair of Charlotte Olympia 'Kitty' velvet slippers.

Meanwhile, Mila, 29, went for a more comfortable look in a black T-shirt, scarf, leather panelled jacket, skinny jeans and high-top trainers.

All that glitters: The Saturdays singer Una Healy (left) and pregnant model Danielle O'Hara

Cute: X Factor contestant Jade Ellis arrived with her daughter Caiden

Cute: X Factor contestant Jade Ellis arrived with her daughter Caiden

Their arrival in the British capital ahead of Thursday night's UK premiere came after the Moscow screening the previous night.

Mila looked stunning in a form-fitting purple Atelier Versace gown, which hugged her trim figure in all the right places.

Meanwhile, Michelle went for a glitzy gold, bronze and black Jason Wu number as she joined her co-stars Mila and James Franco on the red carpet.

Chic: Michelle Williams arrives at London hotel Claridge's in beige trenchcoat, skinny jeans and kitty ballet pumps

Chic: Michelle Williams arrives at London hotel Claridge's in beige trenchcoat, skinny jeans and kitty ballet pumps

Dressed down: Mila Kunis was more relaxed of the pair and wore a leather panelled jacket, skinny blue jeans and trainers

Dressed down: Mila Kunis was more relaxed of the pair and wore a leather panelled jacket, skinny blue jeans and trainers

The Oz promotional tour comes as it emerged this week that Michelle has quietly ended her one year relationship with actor Jason Segel.

Apparently it was the couple's long-distance relationship - she lives in Brooklyn, New York, while he is based in Los Angeles - which was the main factor behind the split.

Oz: The Great And Powerful is due for release in the UK and the USA on March 8.

Keeping her head down: Michelle's promotional tour comes amidst reports she has split from Jason Segel

Keeping her head down: Michelle's promotional tour comes amidst reports she has split from Jason Segel

Star style: Mila kept her eyes shielded from the paparazzi's flashes with a pair of Ray Ban sunglasses

Star style: Mila kept her eyes shielded from the paparazzi's flashes with a pair of Ray Ban sunglasses

Good or evil? Rachel as Evanora and Mila as Theodora in a scene from Oz: The Great And Powerful

Good or evil? Rachel as Evanora and Mila as Theodora in a scene from Oz: The Great And Powerful

Cake, ma'am? Slice of Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake up for auction alongside Princess Diana's engagement letters

Cake, ma'am? Slice of Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake up for auction alongside Princess Diana's engagement letters

  • The boxed fruit slice is in its original Buckingham Palace case
  • Dated 20 November 1947, it comes with a compliments slip
  • Bidding is at £161 and closes tomorrow evening

By Martha De Lacey

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A vintage piece of cake from the wedding of Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh - then Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten - is going under the hammer.

The boxed fruit slice, presented in its original Buckingham Palace case dated 20 November 1947, is accompanied by a compliments slip reading: 'With the best wishes of Their Royal Highnesses The Princess Elizabeth and The Duke of Edinburgh'.

The rare, 65-year-old piece of memorabilia is being sold online auction house PFC Auctions alongside another royal lot: a signed letter from a young Lady Diana Spencer thanking two girls for their congratulations her upon her 1981 engagement to Prince Charles.

Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip on their wedding day after the ceremony

Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip on their wedding day after the ceremony

The 65-year-old slice of fruit cake comes in its original Buckingham Palace box and is accompanied by a compliments slip

Made by McVitie and Price - who also made the chocolate biscuit cake for Prince William’s wedding toKate Middleton in April 2011 - Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake weighed 500 pounds.

Dubbed the 10,000 mile wedding cake, because the ingredients were donated by the Australian Girl Guides and the rum and brandy came from South Africa, the cake featured four tiers and was nine-foot tall.

Prince Philip cut the cake using his sword and it was then served to 2,000 guests at their reception at Buckingham Palace. One layer was kept until the christening of Prince Charles and another was sent back to Australia by way of thanks.

Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake, which was dubbed the 10,000 mile wedding cake, because the ingredients were donated by the Australian Girl Guides and the rum and brandy came from South Africa

Queen Elizabeth's wedding cake, which was dubbed the 10,000 mile wedding cake, because the ingredients were donated by the Australian Girl Guides and the rum and brandy came from South Africa

But it was not the only nuptial loaf served in the palace’s Blue Drawing Room. Ten other wedding cakes were given to the royal couple, some of which were donated to hospitals.

So far the highest bid for the slice of cake is £161, with bidding closing tomorrow night at 7pm. A slice of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's wedding cake raised a staggering £1,917 the first time it appeared at auction in May 2011.

To bid on the cake visit the PFC Auction website.

Wedding of Princess Elizabeth to the Duke of Edinburgh - on the balcony at Buckingham Palace are, from left to right, King George VI, Princess Margaret, Lady Mary Cambridge, Princess Elizabeth, Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary

Wedding of Princess Elizabeth to the Duke of Edinburgh - on the balcony at Buckingham Palace are, from left to right, King George VI, Princess Margaret, Lady Mary Cambridge, Princess Elizabeth, Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary

A slice of cake from the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton sold at auction in May 2011 for £1,917

A slice of cake from the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton sold at auction in May 2011 for £1,917

A case containing wedding cake from Queen Victoria's wedding in 1840 is seen on display at an exhibition in Windsor Castle, Berkshire, in 2007

A case containing wedding cake from Queen Victoria's wedding in 1840 is seen on display at an exhibition in Windsor Castle, Berkshire, in 2007

'Your kind thoughts are much appreciated': A thank you letter from Diana

Also up for auction alongside the Queen's wedding cake is a signed letter from Lady Diana Spencer thanking 'Gayle and Jo' for their letter of congratulations upon the announcement of her engagement to Prince Charles on 24 February 1981.

In the Buckingham Palace-headed letter Lady Diana Spencer writes: 'Dear Gayle and Jo, I would very much like to thank you for your extremely kind letter of congratulations on my engagement. Your kind thoughts are much appreciated. Yours sincerely, Diana.'

Prince Charles and  Princess Diana divorced in August 1996, one year before her death.

The current bid for the letter is £409 and the lot closes tomorrow night at 7pm.

A letter from Lady Diana Spencer to 'Gayle and Jo', left, thanking them for their letter of congratulations upon her engagement to Prince Charles on 24 February 1981, right

Leona Lewis showcases her hourglass figure in stunning peplum gown

Leona Lewis showcases her hourglass figure in stunning peplum gown

By Sarah Bull

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She hasn't had the best track record in recent months when it comes to her outfit choices.

but on Wednesday night, Leona Lewis put her fashion fails behind her and ticked all the right boxes ina  stunning black peplum gown.

The fitted number flattered the 27-year-old's hourglass curves, with a peplum belt detail highlighting her tiny waist and the sweetheart neckline drawing attention to her cleavage.

Getting it right for once: Leona Lewis put her recent fashion fails behind her to wear a stunning peplum gown for the opening night of the JW Marriott Marquis Hotel in Dubai on Wednesday night

Getting it right for once: Leona Lewis put her recent fashion fails behind her to wear a stunning peplum gown for the opening night of the JW Marriott Marquis Hotel in Dubai on Wednesday night

Leona wore her dip-dyed hair in loose curls as she prepared to wow 1,200 VIP guests at the opening night of the JW Marriott Marquis Hotel in Dubai.

The former X Factor winner was joined at the star-studded launch of the stunning five-star hotel by stars including Donna Karan, local singers Salha and the Million Dollar Band, and Dubai TV presenter DJ Bliss.

Leona had earlier tweeted her excitement over the event, sharing a picture of the hotel - which was recently named the world's tallest hotel by the Guinness World Records - on her Twitter page.

Dressed to impress: The gown featured a peplum belt detail around the waist and a sweetheart neckline which drew attention to Leona's hourglass curves

Flawless: Leona left her dip-dyed hair loose in curls for the occasion, and kept her make-up simple

Flawless: Leona left her dip-dyed hair loose in curls for the occasion, and kept her make-up simple

Luxury: The JW Marriott Marquis Dubai Hotel was in December crowned the world's tallest hotel

Luxury: The JW Marriott Marquis Dubai Hotel was in December crowned the world's tallest hotel

The singer's big night came ahead of the announcement that she is set to launch her own range of cruelty-free cosmetics with The Body Shop, and will also become a 'brand activist' for the company.

Her limited edition range of make-up and fragrances is to go on sale from March 26 and she will stage a concert to mark the occasion which is being streamed online.

Leona of the collaboration: 'I'm passionate about beauty and I'm all about animal rights. As a result, I'm really conscious of where the products that I use come from.

Missing the mark: Leona has worn a series of unflattering outfits in recent months

'The collaboration is a natural fit.'

She has also designed the packaging for the vegetarian-friendly range, which uses man-made musk.

As part of her role with the firm, the 2006 X Factor winner will be joining their campaign to end animal-testing globally, building on an European Union ban.

To celebrate the partnership, Leona will also be holding an exclusive gig for fans which will be live streamed on the day of the launch.  For more information on the gig, follow The Body Shop on Facebook.

New venture: Leona has announced she is launching her own range of cruelty-free cosmetics for The Body Shop

New venture: Leona has announced she is launching her own range of cruelty-free cosmetics for The Body Shop

Anastacia cancels European tour as she's diagnosed with breast cancer for the SECOND time

Anastacia cancels European tour as she's diagnosed with breast cancer for the SECOND time

By Sarah Bull

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Tragic news: Anastacia has been diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time

Tragic news: Anastacia has been diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time

Anastacia has been diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time. 

The 44-year-old singer, who previously beat the disease back in 2003, has been forced to cancel her European tour after receiving the tragic news.

Explaining her disappointment over the cancellation in a statement, Anastacia said: 'I feel so awful to be letting down all my amazing fans who were looking forward to It's A Man's World Tour.

'It just breaks my heart to disappoint them.'

Anastacia's tour had been scheduled to kick off in London on April 6th, but the singer has been instructed by her doctors to cancel all performances and not travel from now until further notice.

The I'm Outta Love star will, however, continue with the recording and writing of her new album, and is hoping to at some point in the near future schedule in another tour.

The statement continued: 'Now more then ever, she is determined to live by her motto “Don't ever let cancer get the "Best of You!"

'A born survivor, Anastacia has one goal and that is to make a full recovery with the support of her family, friends and everyone around her.'

Singing sensation: Anastacia has been in the charts with hit songs such as I'm Outta Love and One Day In Your Life

Singing sensation: Anastacia has been in the charts with hit songs such as I'm Outta Love and One Day In Your Life

Announcement: Anastacia posted a statement about the illness on her Facebook page to her fans

Announcement: Anastacia posted a statement about the illness on her Facebook page to her fans

ANASTACIA'S HEALTH BATTLES

1981 - Anastacia is diagnosed with incurable bowel condition Crohn's Disease, aged 13.

She was then left in a wheelchair after an operation to remove a foot of her intensines.

1987 - The singer triggers a Crohn's relapse at age 19.

2003 - Anastacia is diagnosed with breast cancer after going for a routine check-up when she decided she wanted to have a breast reduction.

She had a partial mastectomy and six weeks of radiotherapy to treat the disease.

2008 - The singer is diagnosed with heart condition supraventricular tachycardia.

Declining surgery, she now has to take a daily pill to keep the condition under control.

2013 - Anastacia announces she is cancelling her European tour after being diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time.

Speaking previously about her successful battle against breast cancer, Anastacia blamed the stress of being a world-famous singer for her contracting the disease, as there was no history of breast cancer in her family.

In an interview in 2008, Anastacia said: 'More and more women today are getting cancer which is not gene related.I'm sure it was stress which caused mine.

'The not-so-great relationship I was in and my career - it all became too much for me. I'm not really made for this business. I don't really know how to be the star my record company always wanted me to be.

'None of it feels natural to me. I can relate to girls in this industry who have gone off the rails like Amy Winehouse and Britney Spears  -  I think I could only cope with it at all because I was a lot older than them.

'After the surprising success of the first album, I went straight into the second and it became a blur as I was working so hard. I had a herniated vocal chord and I got what I thought were panic attacks. The cancer came soon after.'

< p>In addition to battling cancer, Anastacia also suffers from a heart condition called supraventricular tachycardia - in which the heart can have episodes of beating more than three times as fast as average - and has to take a daily pill to regulate it.

Screen star: Last year, Anastacia was one of a number of guest judges on The X Factor

Screen star: Last year, Anastacia was one of a number of guest judges on The X Factor

Health battles: Anastacia suffers from incurable bowel condition Crohn's Disease and has a large scar on her stomach from an operation to remove a foot of her intestine as a teenager

Health battles: Anastacia suffers from incurable bowel condition Crohn's Disease and has a large scar on her stomach from an operation to remove a foot of her intestine as a teenager

She also has Crohn's Disease - an inflammatory bowel condition that causes a range of distressing symptoms such as diarrhoea, vomiting, fevers and severe cramps.

But speaking recently about her health struggles, Anastacia said that her illnesses have helped shape her into the woman she is today.

She said: 'My illness has changed me in so many ways. It affects everything from my health to my job to my relationships. What is seen as a curse for some is a gift for me because it has helped me to discover who I really am.'

'The lamb and I share a spiritual connection': Meet the 27-year-old who cannot live without her beloved stuffed toy

'The lamb and I share a spiritual connection': Meet the 27-year-old who cannot live without her beloved stuffed toy

  • Tonight's episode of My Strange Addiction also features a 19-year-old girl obsessed with eating deodorant

By Margot Peppers

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On tonight's episode of TLC's My Strange Addiction, a 27-year-old woman shares her obsession with her stuffed toy lamb.

Ever since Audrey received the lamb as a gift five years ago, she has been unable to function without it, even bringing it to the gym with her when she works out.

'The lamb is my best friend,' she says in a trailer for the TLC show. 'I take it with me everywhere I go.'

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he is really just carefree and adventurous and awesome

Obsessed: On tonight's episode of TLC's My Strange Addiction, 27-year-old Audrey has been unable to function without her stuffed toy lamb for the past five years

Stuffed lamb

Special bond: Audrey played with toys as a child, but none ever made her feel the way the blue lamb does

Audrey says she played with stuffed animals as a child, but nothing ever compared to how she feels about this blue lamb.

'The lamb just sort of spoke something to me that no other stuffed animal ever has before,' she explains.

And it's not just the typical human-toy relationship for Audrey. 

'I think the lamb and I share a spiritual connection,' she says. 'When I am looking into the lamb's eyes, I feel a sense of comfort and peace. I can just feel all the stress floating up and away.'

Stuffed lamb

Fun in the sand: She even takes her toy to the playground. 'The lamb loves to be outdoors,' she says

Stuffed lamb addiction

Pals: The lamb is Audrey's best friend. 'He is really just carefree and adventurous and awesome,' she gushes

Stuffed lamb

Doing exercise: In one shot, Audrey is seen working out on a treadmill with her lamb tucked into her fanny pack

The video sees Audrey smiling as her toy rides on the merry-go-round.

She takes it to a playground, reads it bedtime stories, brings it for a walk on the beach and even pretends to feed it.

In one shot, Audrey is seen working out on a treadmill with her lamb tucked into her fanny pack.

And although her sister Ansley calls her relationship with the lamb 'strange', Audrey maintains: 'He is really just carefree and adventurous and awesome.'

Tonight's episode also features a girl who is addicted to eating deodorant.

Nineteen-year-old Nicole, whose obsession began two years ago, now consumes 15 sticks of deodorant a month.

Stuffed lamb

More than a toy: 'I think the lamb and I share a spiritual connection,' Audrey says. 'When I am looking into the lamb's eyes, I feel a sense of comfort and peace'

Stuffed lamb

Toy pet: Audrey treats the lamb like a real animal, petting it and even feeding it cucumbers

Her addiction is so extreme that it has taken over her life.

'When I wake up in the morning I want deodorant,' she says in a trailer for the episode. 'After each meal I want deodorant. When I’m stressed out, I eat deodorant.'

Even in her sleep, Nicole can't shake her cravings. 'In the middle of the night, I wake up out of my sleep and I want deodorant,' she explains.

Nicole uses the cap to scoop it out from the stick like a spoon, then chews and swallows it.

And she buys specific brands of deodorant because she prefers the ones with a 'richer taste.'

eating deodorant

Bizarre craving: Also featured on tonight's episode is 19-year-old Nicole, who is addicted to eating deodorant

Eating deodorant

Odd behavior: Nicole uses the cap as a spoon and scoops out chunks of deodorant to chew on and swallow

'It’s really soft,' she says. 'It feels like it melts in my mouth. It has its own unique taste.'

Nicole first developed an urge to taste deodorant when she was four years old. But two years ago, her cravings turned into a full-fledged addiction.

She admits: 'I take deodorant with me everywhere I go, because I never know when I’m going to crave it.'

Nicole also uses spray deodorant to satisfy her addiction, which she says she likes even better because the residue doesn't get stuck in her teeth.

Eating deodorant

Unstoppable urge: Nicole also uses spray deodorant to satisfy her addiction, and says she even likes this version better because the residue doesn't get stuck in her teeth

Eating deodorant

Particular flavor: She buys specific brands of deodorant because she prefers the ones with a 'richer taste'

'The first time I did it, it made my tongue really numb for a couple of hours,' she says of using aerosol deodorant. 'But I just love the taste.'

Other bizarre addictions from the series include a woman who can't stop eating cat hair, a man in love with a car, and a couple with an unshakable penchant for coffee enemas.

  VIDEO  Woman, 27, who cannot live without her beloved stuffed toy 

  VIDEO  Woman addicted to deodorant eats chinks and sprays on her tongue