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The man I’ve loved all my life doesn’t know my name

The man I've loved all my life doesn't know my name

Susan Horsburgh with her father on her wedding day in 2005 and in 1987.

Inspired by the late Hazel Hawke’s battle with Alzheimer’s, The Weekly’s Susan Horsburgh reveals the agony of her own father’s slow decline.

When I was a kid, Dad was some kind of demigod to me. He’d come home from work, drop his briefcase and give me long cuddles in the kitchen — and instantly it felt like everything was right with the world.

If Mum was the heart of our family, then Dad was the anchor: strong, calm and constant. I remember looking at him as a little girl and loving him so much I thought I’d burst.

An unwavering example of humility and integrity, Dad was a pharmacist who was never happier than when he was in his dispensary, a low-maintenance man whose favourite meal was baked beans and bacon.

Heaven for him was an hour lost in a hardware store. His favourite book was The Power of Positive Thinking and if my four older brothers or I ever came to him with a concern, he could always calm us with some words of wisdom.

His motto was “Life wasn’t meant to be easy” and, in the past, I’ve pooh-poohed that philosophy as somehow Presbyterian and joyless. Now, though, I see it differently — as more a stoic acceptance of the hand you’re dealt.

Dad has never expected a free ride and, when things haven’t gone his way, he has never complained — even six years ago, when he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. He knew what was ahead of him, and yet the grace and courage he showed were heroic.

He was 68 then, but the warning signs had been accumulating for a couple of years. In his speech at my 2005 wedding, for example, he told the same story twice in the space of three minutes. In some ways, the eventual diagnosis felt almost like a formality, but that’s when the grieving began.

Not all my brothers have found it as difficult as I have — maybe they’ve absorbed more of Dad’s positive thinking — but, to me, Alzheimer’s seems like death by a thousand cuts; nothing diminishes a person quite like it.

The disease has not only robbed Dad of his memories, it has warped the way he thinks and the way he acts. It’s so stealthy, it’s muddled my memories, too, making me wonder when my dad ended and the disease began.

I once read a quote: “Memory is a way of holding onto the things you love, the things you are, the things you never want to lose.”

As your memories evaporate, I imagine it’s like feeling the foundations of your life erode from under you.

At first, Dad was sceptical that he even had Alzheimer’s, then he thought he’d beat it, and then — as the reality sank in — he just didn’t mention it anymore.

A workaholic who’d been forced to retire, Dad didn’t know what to do with himself all day. He’d bought his first computer in the 1970s and now he couldn’t even navigate the internet.

Once a keen home handyman, he couldn’t assemble an IKEA desk. Eventually, he stopped reading books because he couldn’t follow a storyline.

Dad adored my first child, but by the time my third came along, he’d forgotten who she was.

When I was in labour, I called Dad between contractions to sing him Happy Birthday, knowing that he and my almost-born baby would share that special day, but he didn’t seem to grasp what giving birth meant.

A few weeks later, we visited my parents in Brisbane. “Who’s that little boy?” he’d ask, as I put my newborn daughter to bed — and then he’d appear 20 minutes later holding my freshly awoken and wailing baby, having found the tiny sleeping stranger in the spare room.

Beyond the memory loss, it’s the personality and behavioural changes that have broken my heart — and tested my patience. In the media, the typical Alzheimer’s story tends to feature a saintly spouse who happily cares for their often cantankerous, incontinent partner for years without complaint.

I don’t think that that portrayal is fair on the carers struggling just to get through each day. As Dad’s Alzheimer’s took hold, it didn’t matter how many times I told myself it was a degenerative brain disease, the repetitive, illogical behaviour could be exhausting.

Try driving with someone who recites the words of every street sign and billboard you pass, or finding someone dressed for work and eating cereal at 11pm, convinced it’s morning and refusing to go to bed.

Try answering the question, “What are we doing?” every 10 minutes — for hours on end.

Alzheimer’s isn’t just forgetting your shopping list; it’s being handed a phone and not knowing what it’s for.

Dad once held up a crossword puzzle half-finished in his own handwriting and asked, “Who did this?” When he could still walk, he’d studiously step on all the footpath cracks like a superstitious child.

I’m not proud of it, but in the early years, I desperately missed my smart, sweet dad and sometimes resented the detached, insensitive stranger who’d taken his place. And I was only visiting from interstate every couple of months.

Of course, it was much worse for Mum. Nine months after Dad’s diagnosis, she was told she had bowel cancer and almost died from post-operative complications.

For the next year, Mum endured chemo while caring for Dad, her husband unaware of — and apparently unmoved by — her illness. Her devoted husband had all but disappeared.

Later, he started wandering. He walked out of the house late one afternoon and was lost all night during a violent Brisbane thunderstorm, my family scouring the streets, my mother beside herself — until he was found at daybreak sheltering near a timberyard and the police brought him home.

What was that like for my father as the lightning struck, not knowing where he was or how he got there? It was too awful to imagine.

By the time Dad went into care last year, Mum was physically and emotionally spent. Unlike many with Alzheimer’s, Dad was never aggressive, but he was a big man whose body was failing him, and Mum bore the bruises of trying to wrangle him into the bath.

Although Mum was stricken with guilt, the move freed her from the drudgery of his care and let them enjoy their time together.

These days, Dad can’t name his wife of 52 years, but he knows she is someone special; he lights up when she walks into the room.

Every day, Mum sweeps in like a whirling domestic dervish, feeding him lunch, shaving his whiskers or replenishing his fridge with Violet Crumbles — and Dad’s eyes never leave her.

I remember one visit last year when he held Mum’s hand to his chest, his eyes filling with tears. I’d never seen such tenderness between them.

“It’s like it was when we first met,” Mum said. After those five fraught years caring for him at home, Mum had a new appreciation of her husband.

Alzheimer’s has brought such deep, complicated sadness to my family, yet to only describe the damage this disease has wrought does not do my dad justice.

Alan Horsburgh is more than the sum of his symptoms — and occasionally my warm, gentle father fights his way to the surface. He doesn’t say much anymore and, if he does, it often doesn’t make sense, but he still loves physical affection.

Just a few weeks ago, as we went for a walk around the nursing home, I put my arms around him as he sat in his wheelchair and pressed my cheek against his.

Out of nowhere, he whispered, “You’re my favourite little girl” — and, for that fleeting moment, I felt I was. My dad had come home again and everything was right with the world.

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Retro read: The man who brings royal babies into the world

Retro read: The man who brings royal babies into the world

Royal gynaecologist George Pinker, and Diana and Charles bring baby Prince William home from hospital, 1982.

When Prince Charles and Princess Diana were expecting their first child in 1982, in the pages of The Weekly’s Royal Baby Special we met the man who would deliver Prince William, Gynaecologist George Pinker.

One day in late June or early July Mr George Pinker’s telephone will ring. It will be the summons to deliver the baby who may one day be monarch of Great Britain.

As surgeon gynaecologist to the Queen and, by custom, to the women in her family, royal babies are no novelty to him. He saw the Duchess of Gloucester’s son and daughters into the world, Princess Michael of Kent’s Frederick and Gabriela, and also Princess Anne’s Peter and Zara.

But this will be his most avidly awaited delivery, the focus of world attention. Photographers will be lying in wait outside his door for the moment when he steps out in answer to that telephone call. Many would find it a paralysing responsibility.

George Pinker, is a kindly, silver-haired man of 57, not tall, something of a dandy in his precise pinstriped suits. His manner treads an admirably fine line between professional authority and affable bonhomie, perfect for the delicate duty of gynaecological adviser to the Queen.

His credentials are impeccable. He is considered one of the top five gynaecologists in Britain and, when he was called upon to succeed Sir John Peel in 1973, he was, at 48, one of the youngest specialists in the royal service. Mr Pinker has been a consultant at St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington, in London, since 1958, and is also consultant gynaecologist at the Middlesex and Soho hospitals, and the King Edward VII Hospital for Officers. For years now he was enjoyed a growing reputation among the more aristocratic young mums who queue in his Harley Street consulting rooms.

Ten years ago, when I was having my first baby, the women with the most well-bred voices and most expensive maternity dresses at the ante-natal classes were all “with Pinker”. Having a baby delivered by Pinker at the Lindo Wing, the private section of St Mary’s Hospital is in the same bracket as sitting in the royal enclosure at Ascot or having tickets for centre court at Wimbledon.

He gave me an ante-natal check-up when my own gynaecologist was on holiday, and his appeal was understandable. I remember him as charming, suave and reassuring without being patronising.

His consultancy at St Mary’s, one of the great London teaching hospitals, means that as well as the rich, the famous, and the high-born, Mr Pinker delivers babies on the National Health Service. Poor and underprivileged mothers from the slum districts around Paddington know him as a wise and gentle doctor, too.

His nursing staff hold him in the highest esteem, always one of the great acid tests. No praise is too good for him.

“He has an immense personal and professional reputation,” said a former administrator at St Mary’s Hospital, describing him as the archetypal gynaecologist — professional, polished and courteous.

This seeming paragon was born in 1924. His father’s name was Ronald; his mother’s, ironically, Queenie. After attending school in Reading, he studied medicine at St Mary’s Hospital and London University, qualifying in 1947. He has worked, in his time, at all the top English gynaecological units, the Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, and Queen Charlotte’s Hospital, London, and acquired an international reputation. In 1972, he was appointed honorary consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist to the Royal Women’s Hospital, Melbourne.

Like so many doctors, George Pinker married a nurse, Dorothy Russell. They have four children, three sons and a daughter, all now almost grown-up. Home is a large and comfortable house called Medley in Kingston Hill on the wooded fringes of Richmond Park (his address is no secret; it is listed in the London telephone book). Outside medicine his tastes are simple and civilised — music, an evening at the ballet, gardening, sailing, skiing with his family, fell walking in the Lake District.

Unless complications develop, Mr Pinker will encourage the Princess of Wales to continue to enjoy an active pregnancy with plenty of exercise and sufficient rest. Being the mother of an Heir in direct line to the Throne, Diana will probably be under rather closer medical supervision than other pregnant women of her age, and Dr Richard Bayliss, head of the royal medical household and the Queen’s physician, will be in constant liaison with Mr Pinker.

Princess Anne, as daughter of the Queen, would — in the old royal tradition — have had both her babies at Buckingham Palace. Her own preference was to have them at home, but Mr Pinker was persuasive. He insisted she go into hospital, where all the facilities of modern medicine were available if needed.

Although no formal announcement has been made, many feel the odds are good that the Princess of Wales will also give birth at the Lindo Wing.

Admittedly, crowds can be kept at bay more easily at Buckingham Palace, but the Lindo Wing is approached by a side road that could be sealed off if necessary. Taking the Princess to hospital might be an easier task than taking the hospital to her, which a Palace birth would entail. Blood transfusion units, an emergency operating theatre and staff would all have to be installed.

The maternity section at the Lindo Wing is on the ground floor and, on arrival, the Princess of Wales, like all mothers, would be shown to her room, containing a bed, a telephone on a bedside table, a wash-basin, television, wardrobe, and chairs for visitors.

The “royal” room, the end of a row of nine, nearest the nursery and the shared lavatory, sports a newer wallpaper than the rest. The atmosphere, as a recent patient remarked, remains that of a second-class hotel. There are no private bathrooms and toilets, and the communal baths are Victorian, enormous tubs that require a step-ladder to scale.

The discreet private hotel ambience is helped by the fact that there’s not a white coat in sight. Consultants make their rounds in low-key suits (tweed jackets at weekends), and only don surgical garb for an actual birth. The indication that a birth is imminent is a pair of surgical boots awaiting the gynaecologist outside the door of the room.

As labour progresses, the Princess of Wales will not be transferred to a labour ward. Instead — and this is one of the advantages of the Lindo Wing for royal mothers — nurses convert the high-standing bed into a delivery bed, removing the foot. The paraphernalia of an up-to-the-minute delivery ward is then wheeled in.

Mr Pinker does not merely tolerate the father’s presence: he actively encourages it. “I think it helps the mother very much,” he has said. “I think it strengthen the bond between the parents.”

Captain Mark Phillips was present when both his children were born. So were the Duke of Gloucester and Prince Michael of Kent. With such precedents — certainly if Mr Pinker has any influence in the matter — it is likely Prince Charles will be beside his Diana.

While sympathetic to those mothers wishing to have as natural a birth as possible — he would, for instance, give careful consideration to anyone requesting a Leboyer-style birth — Mr Pinker advocates pain-killers during labour if the mother needs them. Epidural anaesthetics are almost routine for his private patients in the Lindo Wing — Princess Anne had them for the birth of both her children. Although the mother loses sensation below the waist, she remains conscious and alert, and breathing exercises, learned at the ante-natal classes which Mr Pinker heartily recommends, help her participate in the birth.

George Pinker is not the kind of doctor who would rush to initiate anything new and controversial, but nor is he as conservative as his predecessor. He welcomes progress, but he is a careful and sensible man, guided by caution and realism rather than innovation.

He gave, for example, full support to Patrick Steptoe and Dr Robert Edwards when they pioneered the world’s first “test-tube” birth ion 1978, complimenting them on their success. “There is much work to be done for childless couples who have just as much of a problem as many other patients,” he said.

There are, he considers, no ethical problems involved “for the moment”, but “one doesn’t know quite how healthy or otherwise a baby who has been out of the body environment and put back is going to be. There may be problems we can only learn about from experience”. No one knew, he feared, how less-scrupulous people might use the technique.

That blend of receptiveness tempered with circumspection is typical of him. He is the perfect man for the sensitive position he holds, but then, in many respects, he has in the Princess of Wales a perfect patient — young and healthy, looking forward to motherhood, eager to do everything that will be best for her baby. A baby could not have a better production team.

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How to turn a hobby into a successful business

How to turn a hobby into a successful business

At some stage in our lives many of us ponder how we can take something we love and turn it into a career. Joey Toutounji has done just that, transforming her passion for health and fitness into an opportunity to make a difference.

A sports advocate from a young age, Joey grew up playing hockey and keeping active at the gym, doing yoga classes and outdoor workouts on the beach. A career as a PE teacher was the launchpad into her now booming fitness business that promotes healthy lifestyle choices.

So far, Joey’s passion for fitness has seen her establish a children’s wellbeing rock band, Kids4Life; co-author a children’s book, Please Mum, Don’t Supersize Me; produce a personal training video directory, Meet Your Personal Trainer; and produce and present fitness and travel TV show Feel Good TV.

“What I love about my career is that every day is different,” Joey says.

“One day I may be out filming the latest fitness trends or adventure activity, and then the next day I may be in the office creating new material or writing.”

Joey has helped numerous people achieve their fitness goals through her personalised diet plans, including one family who lost a combined total of 47kg on her 12-week healthy lifestyle program.

“It wasn’t with a strict diet, it was by making lifestyle changes incorporating an active lifestyle and healthy food choices,” Joey says.

Joey’s health and fitness empire began with Kids4Life, created when she teamed up with a music-teacher friend to produce kids’ music with lyrics centred around healthy eating, keeping active and self-esteem.

“I was running kids’ sports parties on the weekend and during the parties I would often find it hard to get a variety of music that was fun but also educational and age relevant,” she says.

Kids4Life developed a CD, DVD and stage show which was performed throughout Australia and New Zealand. From that, Meet Your Personal Trainer and Feel Good TV emerged.

“We thought it would be great to have a ‘feel good’ TV show where we could incorporate health, fitness and lifestyle information in an informative but also entertaining way for the community to enjoy,” Joey explains.

Joey says she loves being able to see the positive changes she makes in people’s lives. “If children understand that eating healthy is a good thing, then it is setting a great foundation for the rest of their life.”

Season two of Feel Good TV will air on Foxtel’s Aurora channel later this year.

Read about more inspirational women here!

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Prada casts first black model in 20 years

Prada casts first black model in 20 years

Malaika Firth for Prada.

Prada has cast a black model in an advertising campaign for the first time in nearly two decades.

Malaika Firth — a 19-year-old Kenyan-born, British-raised model — appears in the luxury brand’s autumn/winter 2013 campaign.

Related: Fashion magazine under fire for racist slave shoot

It is the first time Prada has cast a black model since Naomi Campbell appeared in a print advertisement in 1994.

Asian model Fei Fei Sun appears in the same new editorial, making it something of a milestone for Prada. The brand rarely employs women of other races, preferring to hire Anglo models.

The multicultural campaign has been widely applauded by most users of social media but other online commentators have criticised the brand for taking so long to embrace ethnic diversity.

“As we’ve documented repeatedly on this website, the fashion industry as a whole has a number of problems with race — whether it’s the under-representation of models of colour on the world’s biggest runways, or the spate of ignorant but widely copied trends, like blackface references in editorials,” Jenna Sauers wrote on feminist blog Jezebel.

Related: Vogue under fire for another ‘blackface’ shoot

“Perhaps no single brand has embodied near-total whiteness more than Prada. What made the company finally hire a black model for its seasonal ad campaign? Prada isn’t saying. Let’s hope it won’t be 19 years before we see another.”

Incidentally, the same campaign features model Christy Turlington, who at 44, is considerably older than the brand’s usual spokespeople.

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The body at 50: Elle Macpherson poses nude

Elle Macpherson has posed naked for a magazine cover as she approaches her 50th birthday.

The supermodel recreated her famous 1994 Playboy cover for the Australian edition of Harper’s Bazaar magazine.

Elle looks stunning in the cover shot, but she’s far from the first big star to strip off for the cover of a magazine.

From actresses like Jennifer Aniston and Angelina Jolie, to tennis star Serena Williams and even Nicole Kidman – here are some of the best nude cover shoots.

Elle’s 1994 *Playboy* cover.

Elle’s 1994 Playboy cover.

Elle Macpherson on the cover of *Harper’s Bazaar*.

Elle Macpherson on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar.

Deborah Hutton on the cover of the January 2012 issue of *The Weekly*.

Deborah Hutton on the cover of the January 2012 issue of The Weekly.

Kate Winslet on the cover of the December 2008 issue of *Vanity Fair*.

Kate Winslet on the cover of the December 2008 issue of Vanity Fair.

Nicole Kidman on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in July 1999.

Nicole Kidman on the cover of Rolling Stone in July 1999.

Demi Moore’s iconic *Vanity Fair* cover in August 1991.

Demi Moore’s iconic Vanity Fair cover in August 1991.

Brooke Shields on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in October 1996.

Brooke Shields on the cover of Rolling Stone in October 1996.

Jennifer Aniston on the cover of *GQ* in January 2009.

Jennifer Aniston on the cover of GQ in January 2009.

Keira Knighley and Scarlett Johansson with Tom Ford on the cover of *Vanity Fair* in 2006.

Keira Knighley and Scarlett Johansson with Tom Ford on the cover of Vanity Fair in 2006.

Kate Hudson on the cover of *InStyle* in January 2009.

Kate Hudson on the cover of InStyle in January 2009.

Gwyneth Paltrow on the cover of *GQ* in June 2008.

Gwyneth Paltrow on the cover of GQ in June 2008.

Serena Williams on the cover of *ESPN* magazine in 2009.

Serena Williams on the cover of ESPN magazine in 2009.

Jennifer Aniston on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in 1996.

Jennifer Aniston on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1996.

Supermodel Naomi Campbell on the cover of *Love* magazine in February 2010.

Supermodel Naomi Campbell on the cover of Love magazine in February 2010.

Aussie beauty Jennifer Hawkins on the cover of *Marie Claire* in 2010.

Aussie beauty Jennifer Hawkins on the cover of Marie Claire in 2010.

Angelina Jolie on the cover of *Esquire* in 2007.

Angelina Jolie on the cover of Esquire in 2007.

Supermodel Cindy Crawford on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in 1994.

Supermodel Cindy Crawford on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1994.

Cindy also stripped off for *New York* magazine in 1994.

Cindy also stripped off for New York magazine in 1994.

Mariah Carey on the cover of *Interview* magazine in September 2007.

Mariah Carey on the cover of Interview magazine in September 2007.

Drew Barrymore on the cover of *Spy* magazine in April 1997.

Drew Barrymore on the cover of Spy magazine in April 1997.

Supermodel Kate Moss on the cover of *Love* magazine in February 2010.

Supermodel Kate Moss on the cover of Love magazine in February 2010.

A pregnant Britney Spears on the cover of *Harper’s Bazaar* in July 2006.

A pregnant Britney Spears on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar in July 2006.

*True Blood’s* Anna Paquin, Stephen Moyer and Alexander Skarsgard on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in 2010.

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Lady Gaga on the cover of *Rolling Stone* in May 2009.

http://cdn.assets.cougar.bauer-media.net.au/s3/digital-cougar-assets/AWW/2013/09/13/25979/175144578_10.jpg

Kim Kardashian on the cover of *W* magazine last year.

Kim Kardashian on the cover of W magazine last year.

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Cher: ‘Tom Cruise was one of my best lovers’

Cher: ‘Tom Cruise was one of my best lovers’

It is one of Hollywood’s strangest hook-ups, but Cher has no problem reminiscing about her relationship with Tom Cruise.

The story of the 1980s romance between the Lycra-clad songstress and the staunch Scientologist has resurfaced with Cher’s public declaration that he is in her top five list of lovers.

Cher spoke candidly to Andy Cohen on Watch What Happens Live and in a game called “Truth or Cher”, the host asked Cher to name her all-time best lovers.

After proclaiming a lot of her lovers came in first, and with some prompting from the host, Cher opened up about her sex life.

“I’ve had the greatest lovers EVER,” she said.

When TV host Andy asked specifically where Tom Cruise would be on her list, Cher replied, “He was in the top five,” before quickly clarifying, “It’s a list, not a long list, but it’s a good list.”

Cher, 67, caused a stir when first admitting to Oprah in 2008 that she had previously been in a relationship with Tom Cruise, who is 16 years her junior.

“Aw,” Cher exclaimed when a picture of Tom was shown on the show, saying: “Well, he wasn’t a Scientologist then!”

Cohen asked if the duo had “a hot and heavy relationship,” to which Cher replied, “Well, it was pretty hot and heavy for a little minute.”

“But he’s also a great guy,” she added. “The person that I knew was a great, lovable guy.”

The singer went on to date a long list of famous men including Gene Simmons, Val Kilmer and Richie Sambora, but her love affair with Tom struck as the most surprising.

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Why can’t women keep their clothes on in music videos?

Why can't women keep their clothes on in music videos?

A still from Robin Thicke's explicit Blurred Lines video.

Women can be astronauts and prime ministers but watch a music video and you could be convinced ladies are only capable of two things: gyrating and licking phallic objects, writes Zoe Arnold.

I’m one of those people who hears a song on the radio, knows half the words, but has no idea of the artist.

Ask me to name who is trending in the Top 100 now and I will draw a blank. Actually, 100 blanks. My music preferences are largely decades old, and my radio is generally controlled by my toddlers, who will choose The Wiggles over FM radio any day.

In the name of research, I recently you-tubed ‘Blurred Lines’ and ‘We Can’t Stop’ (by Robin Thicke and Miley Cyrus respectively) to watch their music videos.

They are uncannily alike; much of the screen time is devoted to goddess-like women gyrating around the place in waist-high underpants while licking phallic objects.

When they aren’t gyrating, they dry hump whatever’s closest: a man, a woman, a bed … it doesn’t seem to matter.

They have both been slammed by feminists the world over for portraying women as (dumb) sex objects.

Turns out both music videos are shot by the same woman: Diane Martel.

It pains me that a woman is responsible for these videos. It seems so unnecessary to make nudity the focus of two songs whose lyrics could be just passed off as inane. Now they’re both inane, and offensive. Nice one, Diane.

Robin Thicke tells us that he is “nothing like your last guy, he too square for you, he don’t smack that ass and pull your hair like that” — so romantic! — while Miley Cyrus cleverly makes a rhyme about cocaine use “And everyone in line in the bathroom, Trying to get a line in the bathroom”. Actually wait, she didn’t even make a rhyme.

The truth is, these songs are really catchy. They both feature somewhere in the Top 10 pretty much wherever they are being played world over. And they are fun to dance to, at least in the privacy of my own home.

I’m no wowser, but both Thicke and Cyrus have a huge teenage and pre-teen fanbase. Young girls love these two stars — particularly Cyrus who once graced our screens as Hannah Montana.

While she’s busy shedding her Disney good-girl image, young impressionable women are looking at her with stars in their eyes.

I don’t know any parent that would want their daughter idolising a scantily clad woman licking various objects around her house. Or want their son to think it’s the norm for men to be fully-clothed, while naked women prance around them, riding stuffed animals.

While of course there is a disconnect between reality and the fantasy world of music videos, those lines become blurred (pardon the pun) when young people are the main consumers.

As adults, we can choose whether or not large plastic panties and a corny hook is what we want from our tunes. But let’s face it: kids listen to what other kids listen to. And they watch what other kids watch.

So, the old adage that sex sells is still boringly correct. The maker of both film clips said in a recent interview: “I want to make videos that sell records … that is my main focus right now.”

With that in mind, she ought to be congratulated. Both songs are selling millions on iTunes alone. Cha-ching!

Maybe music videos aren’t the place to find feminist inspiration. Maybe I need to get me a pair of those giant plastic panties. Or maybe it’s ok for women to wear clothes, and still be inspiring.

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Prince Harry parties until 4am at music festival

Prince Harry parties until 4am at music festival

Cressida Bonas at Glastonbury and Prince Harry in Belize last year.

He’s been dubbed the “party prince” and Harry lived to his name on the weekend, dancing until 4am at the Glastonbury music festival.

Harry stealthily avoided the paparazzi, getting smuggled into the backstage area of the main stage in time for headline act the Rolling Stones’ two-hour gig.

He was joined by his girlfriend Cressida Bonas, who was dressed down in denim dungarees and trendy lime green sunglasses, and a few of their close friends.

In pictures: Harry stuck between girlfriend and ex at wedding

Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis confirmed Harry attended the gig, and said the royal partied until the wee hours, finally leaving at 4am.

“Prince Harry was great actually,” Mr Eavis said. “I recommended that he should go on into the night, because the nightlife is what Glastonbury is all about. At three o’clock in the afternoon, you don’t get it.

“I told him to get his taxi driver to come back at five o’clock in the morning and do you know what? He lasted until four in the morning.”

Harry and Cressida, a 24-year-old dance student and former model, have been inseparable in recent weeks.

Harry has even introduced his new love interest to former flame Chelsy Davy. Chelsy was bridesmaid at the society wedding Harry and Cressida attended last weekend.

Cressida was pictured looking anxious on her way to the event, but seemed relaxed and happy as she caught the train back to London with Harry the next day.

Always the gentleman, Harry helped Cressida with her bag at the station before the couple were whisked back to Kensington Palace by Harry’s security detail.

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Hugh Jackman: “Gay rumours stupid and offensive”

Hugh Jackman has once again spoken out about the "frustrating" rumours he is gay.
Hugh Jackman and Deborra-Lee Furness

Hugh Jackman has once again spoken out about the “frustrating” rumours he is gay.

In an interview with 60 Minutes, the 44-year-old actor dismissed the gossip about his sexuality but said the constant speculation was upsetting for his wife of 17 years Deborra-Lee Furness, 57.

“If I was [gay], I would be,” Hugh said. “It’s to me not the most interesting thing about a person anyway, but I do get frustrated for Deb, because I see Deb go ‘Ah, this is crazy’.”

Deborra-Lee, who appeared alongside her husband in the interview, admitted she found the rumours “offensive” because they implied her marriage was a “sham”.

”It is just wrong, it’s like, it’s a lie,” said Furness, sitting alongside her husband. “It’s just offensive. If he was gay, fine, he would say he’s gay. It has gotten so out of whack … it’s stupid, yeah, it’s annoying, because it’s not true.”

Hugh and Deborra-Lee raise two adopted children together.

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Jessica Simpson welcomes baby boy

Jessica Simpson welcomes baby boy

Jessica Simpson has welcomed a baby boy named Ace Knute Johnson.

The singer, 32 and her fiance, Eric Johnson, welcomed the new addition to their family on Sunday, June 30, her rep confirmed to People magazine.

During her pregnancy Jessica said she was excitedly awaiting the arrival of her son, after accidently revealing she was having a boy on Jimmy Kimmel Live.

“I’m so excited to have a son,” she said.

“I didn’t grow up with a brother and I think the unknown is really exciting. I can’t wait to have that connection with our little man.”

Jessica and Eric also have a daughter Maxwell Drew, aged one.

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