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Liz Hurley ‘instantly attracted’ to Shane Warne

Liz Hurley was 'instantly attracted' to Shane Warne

Liz Hurley and Shane Warne in London

She’s been credited with jazzing up his look and encouraging him to lose weight, but Liz Hurley loved Shane Warne just the way he came.

In an interview with the UK’s Grazia magazine, the actress and model revealed how she was instantly attracted to the former Australian spin bowler. She didn’t mention how she felt about his womanising past.

Related: Shane Warne debuts wrinkle-free new look

The biggest hurdle in their relationship was the fact they were 23 hours apart, one in Australia and the other in the United Kingdom, she revealed.

“It’s a challenge. We’ll see what happens,” she said. “We come from very different worlds so I see that’s fascinating, if not odd, to many.

“But it’s not often you meet people you instantly feel comfortable with, and when you find that — even if there are vast differences and background and experiences — it’s worth following through.

“When you recognise you have a lot in common with someone, it’s nice to explore.”

Your say: Do you think Shane Warne and Liz Hurley are an odd couple, or perfectly suited?

Video: Liz Hurley and Shane Warne attend Elton John’s White Tie and Tiara ball

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Delta Goodrem’s underage date

Delta Goodrem sips cocktail while underage toyboy drinks iced tea

Nick Jonas, 18, and Delta Goodrem, 26.

Hollywood’s newest cougar Delta Goodrem has discovered yet another perk of dating a younger man — she has a permanent designated driver.

Delta, 26, was photographed enjoying a pre-theatre dinner with her 18-year-old boyfriend Nick Jonas in Los Angeles last night.

In pictures: Celebs who are unlucky in love

But while she sipped on a rum cocktail, Nick was forced to stick to iced tea as he is three years under America’s legal drinking age of 21.

The couple didn’t seem to mind Nick’s enforced sobriety, holding hands and laughing as they dined with friends before going to see Les Miserables at a nearby theatre.

Delta donned a short blush-coloured dress and strappy heels, while Nick wore jeans and a blazer.

Related: Meet Brian McFadden’s new girlfriend

Delta was first seen holding hands with Nick in May, just weeks after she ended her engagement with Australia’s Got Talent judge Brian McFadden.

Nick, who has vowed to stay celibate until he is married, has dated fellow teen star Miley Cyrus.

Your say: Would you date someone who was too young to drink alcohol?

Video: Delta Goodrem snapped with new man

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Nominate your favourite Women of Influence

Nominate your favourite Women of Influence

2010 Woman of Influence Maggie Beer

Who are the women that shape your world? This year, the Australian Women’s Weekly will again pay tribute to the country’s most influential women, as nominated by our readers.

They will be celebrated in a photographic portfolio in the November issue of The Weekly.

Related: 2010 Woman of Influence Carla Zampatti

Each year, we ask our readers to nominate the women who most influence the key spheres of our readers’ lives: food, books, arts and entertainment, fashion and current affairs.

In 2010, we honoured Westpac chief executive, Gail Kelly; designer Carla Zampatti; chef Maggie Beer; author Judy Nunn; and director Gillian Armstrong. We asked each their top five tips for success.

Related: 2010 Woman of Influence Maggie Beer

This year, potential nominees could include; chefs Margaret Fulton, Stephanie Alexander and Kylie Kwong; in entertainment, actress Jackie Weaver, costume designer Catherine Martin and curator Elizabeth-Ann McGregor; in fashion, designers Gail Elliott, the Zimmermans, or Fleur Wood; and in books, authors Geraldine Brooks, Nikki Gemmell or Kate Morton; and in current affairs, Queensland Premier Anna Bligh, Governor-General, Ms Quentin Bryce, or Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick.

Who are the women influencing your lives in 2001?

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Unravelling the mystery of our daughters’ life

Fiona and Jamie McNeil's adopted daughter Ruby with their son

Fiona and Jamie McNeil's adopted daughter Ruby with their son

Ruby Mei Zhi Xia McNeil came into her parents’ lives with nothing but a nighty and a pair of plastic shoes.

With three years of her life to fill in, Fiona and Jamie McNeil were sure there was more to know about their Chinese adoptive daughter and they were determined to find out.

The McNeils, both rural veterinarians living in South Gippsland, already had three kids of their own, and decided an orphaned child in need deserved the same privileged upbringing as their biological children were experiencing.

This led the McNeils to investigate inter-country adoption, and they welcomed Ruby into their family two and a half years after beginning the process, which involved an intense application procedure and excruciating wait. They were relieved and excited, but they did have questions.

Why did she weigh only three pounds at birth? Why did her vocabulary stretch only three words? The information they had about Ruby’s past had been collated on a single piece of foolscap paper with boxes indicating her ability to walk or crawl, her name, age, and not much else.

“There were ticks in boxes but nothing more, no explanation,” says Fiona. “You just want to fill in the gaps for them. She was three years old, she didn’t just materialise. She had this whole story that had come before and we wanted to find as much as we could.”

It took a couple of months of relentless internet searching for the McNeils to find a lead.

They searched anything to do with the orphanage their little girl came from and after many nights looking at the screen for hours with no clues, they were eventually rewarded when they chanced upon the blog of an American woman who volunteered in China in 2005.

She wrote about a tiny premature baby being sent up to the unit where she was working. She had even included a picture, and everything seemed to fit.

After establishing contact with the blogger, the story unravelled and Fiona was given the details of the woman who had cared for Ruby for the first five weeks of her life — an English nurse named Lyn Gould.

Lyn was able to confirm that Ruby had been born premature with a life expectancy of six months or less. In the foster home where she was admitted, Lyn took Ruby under her wing, turning around her state of health until she was confident Ruby could grow into a healthy young girl.

“She told us how fragile she was. She rolled our little girl’s cot into her office because she needed such frequent feeding,” says Fiona.

As well as the peace of mind that their baby had been cared for, Lyn was able to provide the family with journal entries from the time, medical information that could prove valuable later in Ruby’s life, and priceless anecdotes from her early years.

“Her diary at the time says that our little girl ate for China — that put a smile on my face straight away because she still does!

“It’s just those personal little things that make a difference for a kid that doesn’t have any baby stories.

“We knew we’d never know what you know when your child is born to you but we wanted to fill in her story so it was hers,” she says.

Fiona acknowledges she was extraordinarily lucky to find someone who had known her little girl. Even more incredible was the opportunities that getting in touch with Lyn opened up to her.

Fiona and Jamie have gone on to work with Lyn and her husband Alan to open the Butterfly Children’s Hospice in the Hunan province, caring for special needs children with a life expectancy of less than 12 months.

One of the long term goals of the clinic is to offer care to families with children in the area who need special treatment, to try to prevent the kids from being abandoned, as is likely to have happened to Ruby.

While Fiona would ultimately like to see all of the children in a situation where they are healthy, loved, and financially supported, as long as children are still being abandoned and are unable to be provided for, they need to be adopted by families who can give them the care they deserve.

“I think adoption is a great thing, but it’s redemptive because there has to have been a tragedy in the first place for the child to have lost a family,” she says.

“It makes me cry my heart out thinking there must be so many kids that don’t get adopted. There’s kids just not getting the support they need. It’s horrible that they have to leave their culture, but there’s no culture in an orphanage.”

Having gone through the gruelling adoption process, and embarking on the very long journey again as she and her husband plan to adopt a child from China with special needs, Fiona hopes that the process can be made easier, so that more children, especially those with special needs, can be adopted from China and around the world.

**For more information or to join the campaign to change adoption laws, visit National Adoption Awareness Week

Your say: Do you have any experience with adoption? Let us know your thoughts by email [email protected]

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Twenty top beauty tips

Twenty top beauty tips

These 20 brilliant beauty hints from the experts will have you looking gorgeous from top to toe, writes Shonagh Walker.

MAKE-UP

  1. “Keep two shades of foundation in your make-up case,” advises L’Oreal Paris make-up director, Rae Morris. “Your complexion changes colour slightly from summer to winter, and you will need to swap them, or perhaps even blend them together to get the right shade for the season.”
  1. “Find the right foundation shade for you by checking the colour on your jaw line,” says Avon make-up artist Jillian Dempsey. “It gives you a better read, plus you’ll have seamless coverage.”

In pictures: Bizarre beauty treatments

  1. “Ensure moisturiser has fully absorbed before applying foundation, so make-up doesn’t ‘slip’ on the skin,” suggests make-up artist Elsa Morgan. “If you’re in a rush, direct the cool air from your hairdryer over your face to speed absorption.”
  1. “For fool-proof blush, pinch your left cheek first,” says Rae Morris. “Check the colour it goes — that is the depth you want your blush, no darker. Then, apply blush to the right cheek, using your left one as a guide.”
  1. “Softer blush works best with age,” advises make-up artist Dale Dorning, CEO of Proof Cosmetics. “Sheer, matt shades are recommended. Avoid shimmer as it will highlight any lines or wrinkles and look garish on mature skins.”
  1. “Use lipstick as a base for blush,” suggests LA-based M.A.C senior artist Tiffany Johnston. “It makes colour last longer. Blend a sheer application over cheeks first and apply a similar shade powder blush over it for a long-lasting look.”
  1. “Don’t smile when applying blush,” warns make-up artist Angie Barton. “Even though it’s a rule we’ve followed for years, it can cause you to apply under cheekbones, which drags your face down. Instead, blend blush just on and slightly above cheekbones, to lift the face.”
  1. Over-plucked eyebrows? “Have a professional brow artist shape what’s left and guide you on growing them back,” advises Carolyn Fox of Fox Salon and Brows in Broadbeach, Queensland. “In the meantime, have them tinted and use a brow filler to mask gaps.”
  1. Don’t be afraid of black eyeliner. “It suits all skin tones and hair colouring,” says M.A.C’s Tiffany Johnston. “Everyone has black pupils, so it draws emphasis to eye colour and makes eyes ‘pop’. For a subtle yet effective look, hide it under the upper eyelashes. Draw it right into the base of the lashes – into the water line under the lid, not on top of the lid. It immediately highlights eyes without looking like you’ve applied too much make-up.”

HAIR

  1. Curly hair misbehaving? “Hydrating shampoo and conditioner will help de-frizz, but take care when styling,” says Jayne Wild from Wild Life Hair in Sydney. “Blot wet hair with paper kitchen towel to absorb water [rubbing with a bath towel will agitate curls]. Use curl-smoothing product before styling and finish with defining cream to encourage shape and shine.”
  1. Too-frequent washing strips hair of the natural oils it needs to remain healthy. “Try a dry shampoo,” advises Anthony Nader, of RAW Hair in Sydney. “Spray it on the roots to absorb oil and dirt, and deliver instant volume, bounce and texture.”
  1. For salon-perfect hair, consider a colour, suggests New York stylist Ted Gibson, who does Angelina Jolie and Anne Hathaway’s hair. “A great cut and colour complement each other.” Use colour-care products to keep your hair in top condition.
  1. Suffering fly-away hair? “After blow-drying, spray hairspray onto a tissue and wipe it over stray strands for a smooth, sleek finish,” says Pantene expert hair stylist Barney Martin, from Barney Martin Hairdressing in Sydney.
  1. Colouring hair at home is a quick, cheap alternative, but can be fraught with hazards. L’Oreal Paris creative colourist director Christophe Robin advises going only one shade lighter than your natural hair colour, but never darker. “It’s easier to fix mistakes by taking lighter hair darker than it is to lighten a mistake made by going darker.” The golden rule? “Stay close to your natural colour and ensure hair is in great condition before colouring.”

SKIN

  1. “Never use soap on your skin,” says Liza Curwen-Begg from Huski Day Spa in Falls Creek, Victoria. “It makes the epidermis less receptive to treatment products because it leaves a layer of film on the skin and strips away protective oils. Choose a detergent- and soap-free cleanser. If you must use a bar, make sure it’s pH balanced and maintains hydration.”
  1. “Cleansers with active ingredients, like AHAs or anti-oxidants, can double as facial masks,” hints Dee Davies from the Clear Skin Clinic in Sydney. “Cleanse make-up, then reapply a layer of cleanser and leave for 20 minutes.”
  1. Do you have acne-prone skin? Team at-home skincare with a series of in-salon Omnilux Medical Light Treatments, from $90 each, 1800 808 993. “The treatments combine glycolic or salicylic acid facials with specialised light to stimulate skin’s repair and immune responses, while destroying bacteria,” explains Dee Davies. “We typically see great results with two treatments a week over four weeks.”

In pictures: Supermodels without makeup

  1. Pigmentation can be addressed with Intense Pulsed Light Therapy (IPL), says Lisa Sullivan-Smith from The Clinic, Sydney. “IPL uses broad-spectrum light to selectively destroy brown and red pigments. It’s effective on broken capillaries, mottled skin and pigmentation. Collagen is also remodelled, so skin appears firmer.”
  1. Weekly exfoliation shouldn’t stress skin. “I prefer an enzyme formula as this is gentler,” says Marionne De Candia, spa manager from Rae’s on Watego’s, Bryon Bay.
  1. Pat moisturisers into skin, never rub, advises New York dermatologist Dr Doris Day. “Your product will penetrate better if you gently pat it into the skin using the pads of your fingertips. This is important around the delicate eye area. Rubbing just smears it and doesn’t aid in ingredient penetration.”

Your say: What are your top beauty tips?

Video: Eat your way to beautiful skin

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Baby beauty bloggers: Cute or creepy?

Baby beauty bloggers: Cute or creepy?

Kids have been trying to find fame on Youtube since Justin Bieber made it big in 2009, but the latest trend is raising more than a few parental eyebrows — meet the baby beauty bloggers.

Tech-savvy toddlers are jumping on the beauty pageant bandwagon, recently popularised by TV show Toddlers & Tiaras, and seeking their 15 minutes by giving video makeup tutorials to an online audience.

Related: Should pageant mother be banned from injecting daughter, 8, with botox?

Sitting in front of a webcam, these pint-sized princesses primp themselves and give a step-by-step guide to pageant preparation. And they know what they’re talking about too.

Madison’s ‘Bridal Look’ video kicks off with the five-year-old makeup guru telling us: “I’m going to show you how to do a bridal makeup look.”

She goes on to demonstrate a complete makeup job, applying foundation, eye shadow, and lipstick for her dedicated viewers, and plugging the products while she’s at it.

Madison is a seasoned beauty vlogger — video blogger — and an online sensation in her own right. One of her videos has garnered close to 750,000 hits.

In another of the videos, young Bella shows viewers how to do a “pro makeup look” applying green eyeshadow, suitable for a Christmas or Easter occasion. The five year old has obviously had some production assistance, with the video cut together to even include a blooper reel at the end.

Related: A Current Affair investigates child beauty pageants

In “Ella’s makeup training” the little girl’s mother leaves the room as she records her tutorial and coats her face with Estee Lauder and Chanel products for an audience of thousands.

While the videos are certainly popular, some are saying the practice of baby beauty blogging is inappropriate, even suggesting it encourages early sexualisation of young girls.

Elizabeth Burke is The Weekly’s youngest writer. Click here to follow her on Twitter and here to follow The Weekly.

Your say: Do you think kids’ beauty videos are cute or just inappropriate?

Video: Pageant mum defends botox for daughter

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Ten ways to keep your hunger at bay

Do you find yourself constantly hungry and always looking for food? Do you reach for the biscuit jar at 3pm? Dietitian Caitlin Reid reveals her top 10 tips to keeping your hunger at bay.

Do you find yourself constantly hungry and always looking for food? Do you reach for the biscuit jar at 3pm? Dietitian Caitlin Reid reveals her top 10 tips to keeping your hunger at bay. Once you make your commitment to break your overeating habit, you’re on your way to successful healthy eating.

Ten ways to keep your hunger at bay

Do you find yourself constantly hungry and always looking for food? Do you reach for the biscuit jar at 3pm? Dietitian Caitlin Reid reveals her top 10 tips to keeping your hunger at bay. Once you make your commitment to break your overeating habit, you’re on your way to successful healthy eating.

Eating regular meals controls blood sugar levels and keeps hunger pangs at bay. Skipping meals causes blood glucose levels to drop, which increases the likelihood of bingeing on fatty or sugary convenience foods such as cakes or chocolate. These foods boost energy levels for a small amount of time, but before long the hunger sets back in and we’re reaching for the wrong types of foods again.

Carbohydrates with a low GI, such as wholegrain bread, low-fat milk and yoghurt and basmati rice, help control blood sugar levels between meals, providing a steady supply of energy and keeping you feeling fuller for longer. Include one low-GI food at each meal and snack.

Fibre slows the movement of food in the digestive system, keeping you feeling fuller for longer. Fibre may also delay the absorption of nutrients such as glucose, thereby increasing insulin sensitivity and influencing the secretion of the hormone CCK (choleocystokinin), which promotes feelings of satiety. Fibre is found in wholegrain breads and cereals, nuts, seeds, legumes, fruit and vegetables.

Water adds volume, filling up your stomach without the kilojoules. It’s also important to keep yourself well hydrated as dehydration can be mistaken for sugar cravings, increasing the likelihood of reaching for kilojoule-laden snacks. Drink at least eight glasses of water each day.

Protein suppresses the hunger hormone ghrelin, meaning you feel satisfied sooner. It also helps keep you feeling fuller, reducing the amount of food eaten at the next meal. Include a serve of protein at all meals and snacks.

It takes about 20 minutes after food enters your mouth before the brain starts to realise you’re filling up. Slowing down your eating gives you time to listen to your hunger levels, reducing the likelihood of overeating. Put your knife and fork down between mouthfuls.

Not getting your beauty sleep affects your hunger hormones, making you hungrier and more prone to weight gain. Aim to get seven to eight hours of sleep each night.

Non-starchy vegetables can be eaten in unlimited quantities, as they’re high in water and fibre, and low in kilojoules. They’re the perfect food to fill up on.

Enjoy this option as a snack or before a meal and crush hunger cravings. A bowl of soup takes up a lot of space in your stomach, stimulating the stretch receptors that send signals to your brain letting you know that you are full. Research shows that enjoying low-kilojoule soup can result in 26 percent less being eaten at the subsequent meal.

Exercising stimulates the release of certain appetite-suppressing hormones such as PYY and PP, which tell the brain when the stomach is full. Just remember not to reward yourself with your favourite foods or large portion sizes after your session.

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Harry and Pippa silence rumours of a romance by seeing other people

Hard luck Harry! Prince's former flame engaged

Prince Harry and Florence Brudenell-Bruce

Prince Harry and Pippa Middleton have poured cold water on speculation about a blooming love affair between William and Kate’s younger siblings by making it clear they are seeing other people.

Harry has reportedly acknowledged that his on-off relationship with ex-girlfriend Chelsy Davy is going nowhere, and is now dating a lingerie model of aristocratic pedigree, Florence Brudenell-Bruce, who is a distant relation of his stepmother, the Duchess of Cornwall.

Ms Brudenell-Bruce recently broke up with her boyfriend of three years, Henry St George, the son of racehorse-owner and close friend to the Queen, Edward St George.

However, she has said she plans to move to Los Angeles later this year, so Prince Harry may be bracing for a long-distance romance.

Meanwhile, Pippa Middleton, the younger sister of Prince William’s wife Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, has stepped out at Wimbledon hand-in-hand with her long-term boyfriend, former cricket player Alex Loudon, to quell speculation that they have broken up.

In what may be a case of wishful thinking, tabloids have linked Harry with Pippa since Kate’s bridesmaid caught the world’s attention at the royal wedding in her figure-hugging white dress.

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Prince Harry is ‘dating a model’

Prince Harry is 'dating a model'

It seems Prince Harry hasn’t held on to his “single” title for long, as reports have emerged the 26-year-old prince is connected to British lingerie model Florence Brudenell-Bruce.

The young prince only stated this week that he is 100 percent single, confirming his split with on-again off-again girlfriend of seven years, Chelsy Davey.

But Harry has been having “secret trysts” with the 25-year-old model in London, the UK’s Sun reported.

He was reportedly seen going in to her Notting Hill apartment on Sunday evening and did not emerge until the next morning.

“I saw Harry arrive at her house in his car. There was a team of protection officers with him travelling in a separate Range Rover,” an unnamed witness said.

“He got out and went inside. They waited outside. I didn’t see him again until he emerged the following morning.”

Florence is a descendant of the Earl of Cardigan and she and Harry are in fact eighth cousins.

When questioned by the paper about her relationship with Harry, Florence neither confirmed nor denied the reports. She simply replied: “There’s not much to say.”

The model, who once dated Formula One racing driver Jenson Button, recently separated from her latest boyfriend, adding fuel to the Prince Harry hook-up reports.

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I’m haunted by my daughter’s murder

I'm haunted by my daughter's murder

Carita Ridgway's mother Annette Foster and sister Samantha

It’s a dream that haunts Annette Foster. Her youngest daughter, Carita, then 19, was sitting with a group of Asian men.

“Everyone seemed in good spirits,” recalls Annette, now in her 60s. “Carita was laughing, but then I realised that there was nothing happy about what was happening.

“The men wanted Carita to choose one of them. I sensed Carita didn’t know how dangerous these men could be, that they’d deceived her … Everything was malevolent. I needed to warn her, but couldn’t.”

In pictures: Notorious Australians

That dream visited Annette more than 20 years ago, but its menace stirs powerful emotions for her even today.

“There were other dreams, too. In one, I was in the centre of a circle of robed men. They told me the energy was running out for my daughter. I didn’t want to frighten Carita. She was young, so I kept the dreams to myself. I wonder if I’d told her whether she might still be alive.”

Annette’s daughter, Carita, a 21-year-old Perth model turned Tokyo bar hostess, died mysteriously in 1992, doctors theorised, of liver failure triggered by food poisoning.

Yet the truth about Carita’s death is that it owed nothing to fate and everything to one man’s dangerous obsessions.

Carita died because her beauty marked her out to a sexual predator determined to transform his darkest fantasies into brutal reality.

That man, a Japanese millionaire named Joji Obara, was convicted of killing Carita Ridgway in 2007, after a gruelling seven- year trial. However, Obara kept his case alive, launching appeal after appeal, denying responsibility for Carita’s death and the rapes of eight other women.

Until now, the fear that he might elude justice forced Carita’s family to keep their silence. A recent decision in the Japanese Supreme Court refusing Obara leave for another appeal has slammed the door on his legal manoeuvring and he is now in Chiba Prison, east of Tokyo.

Finally, Carita’s mother and sister have broken their silence about the man once dubbed “a beast with a human face”.

“Joji Obara is a monster,” says Annette. “Carita thought he was a funny, harmless old man, but for her and for so many others, Obara was the most dangerous man imaginable.”

Crime news: Amish man busted for ‘sexting’ 12-year-old girl

In recent weeks, Annette’s rage has resurfaced. She thinks often about her daughter. “I try to be happy. I know Carita would want that. I miss her smile. So, I cling to that and try to be as happy as I can, but it’s not easy.

“Carita had her life stretching out before her and then it just stopped. I lost my daughter and everything we’d ever share with her. I’ll never know the grandchildren she might have had. Her future disappeared because one man wanted to satisfy some weird sexual urge.”

Annette senses the nightmare is not over yet. “There’s no closure, not for me. I won’t have closure until that man is dead, but even then, I’m not sure that will help.

“Nothing can bring Carita back. In the end, that’s all you’re left with — that immeasurable loss.”

Read more of this story in the July issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you have any messages of support for Carita’s family?

Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $69.95 and receive a BONUS Avon Anew Night Cream valued at $59.99. That’s a 15% saving on the retail price.

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