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Cockatoos aren’t bird-brained after all – in fact, they’re pretty handy with a tool kit.

White parrots from Indonesia, called Goffin’s cockatoos, were already known to make tools out of tree branches, but now they have impressively passed the ‘tool kit test’ – only achieved by chimpanzees and humans. 

It means the brainy birds can plan which tools are needed and carry the right ‘tool kit’ for the job. 

The experiment involves using cockatoos’ favourite food – cashew nuts – in a kind of transparent vending machine for birds.

The experiment involves using cockatoos’ favourite food – cashew nuts – in a kind of transparent vending machine for birds.

To get the treats to drop out, each cockatoo first had to use a pointy tool to pierce a paper screen in front of the nut. 

Then they could use a bendy plastic tool – a straw cut in half lengthways – to push the nut off of a stand so it falls out. 

First, the cockatoos figured out how to use the two tools – within 35 seconds, for two of the brightest birds. 

But the groundbreaking part was when four out of five birds showed they could plan the right set of tools for the job, ICONWIN pick them up and set off with them on their beaks.

Antonio Osuna-Mascaro, from the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, which published the study in Current Biology, said: ‘This behaviour is absolutely stunning, as it shows these cockatoos are so intelligent that they have a mental representation of the tools they will use.’  

To get the treats to drop out, each cockatoo first had to use a pointy tool to pierce a paper screen in front of the nut

He added: ‘When something needs fixing at home, you don’t keep going back and forth for a hammer or nail, you pick up your tool kit.

‘You have an idea of which tools will be needed for the job – and this study suggests that cockatoos do as well.’

The study, published in the journal Current Biology, started with ten Goffin’s cockatoos.

Five of the birds consistently worked out how to use the pointy and bendy tools to get a snack and were willing to do so.

The ‘Alpha male’ of the group, Figaro, was one of two birds which impressively managed the task first time within 35 seconds.

The five successful birds were then presented with the tools, and required to travel three different ways to the clear box with the nut inside.

The experiment was designed to show that birds could plan to take the tool kit they would need – rather than just picking up tools when they became useful.

Then they could use a bendy plastic tool – a straw cut in half lengthways – to push the nut off of a stand so it falls out

In total, four out of five birds learned to carry two tools for the tasks, so that they only had to make one trip.

The cockatoos even worked out how to slot the wooden tool inside the plastic one, to carry them more easily.

Chimpanzees have similarly been found to carry two tools, to pierce a hole in the top of a termite mound with one, and put another inside the mound to draw out the bugs inside.

Dr Osuna-Mascaró said: ‘With this experiment we can say that, like chimpanzees, Goffin’s cockatoos not only appear to be to using tool sets, but they know that they are using tool sets.’

Soundscape pack | OpenGameArt.orgIndonesia

The off-screen cliques and feuds were such that the joke was GMTV stood for ‘grumpy, moody, tired and vicious’. There was a famous falling- out (since mended) between Eamonn Holmes and Anthea Turner, during which he supposedly called his highly paid co-host ‘Princess Tippy Toes’ and said he would quit if she wasn’t sacked.

Holidays | Cruises | Tours | Sure TravelThen there were reports of a froideur between Eamonn and Fiona Phillips — she recently observed that he was better paid and also got perks she ‘wasn’t deemed worthy of’.

Now, an icy exchange between GMTV veterans Lorraine Kelly and Esther McVey (who is also a Tory leadership hopeful), has revealed yet another behind-the-scenes fault line. First, on Monday, Good Morning Britain host Piers Morgan did a link asking Lorraine if she remembered McVey from the days they both worked at ITV. Lorraine gave a short: ‘Yep. Yes I do’ and made not even a token attempt to appear anything other than hostile.

That awkward TV moment: Esther and Lorraine during Monday’s confrontation

Esther tried to defuse speculation of a feud by saying Lorraine was only peeved — and, by implication, jealous — because she had once leapfrogged her in a promotion.

Esther said: ‘She used to be partnered with Eamonn Holmes and then I was promoted to be partnering with Eamonn Holmes.’

Lorraine hit back, saying she didn’t remember any interaction with Esther during the four months they overlapped, and claiming the issue between them is political — she hates Esther’s stance on LGBT rights and is ‘sick to the back teeth’ of the ‘toxic political atmosphere’.

Lorraine, 59, and Esther, 51, are both proudly self-made women who have raised themselves up from humble beginnings to become successful women of substance.

But, as ALISON BOSHOFF reveals, the animosity runs a little deeper than mere politics…

WHAT’S THE SPAT REALLY ALL ABOUT?

It’s been claimed the bad blood is not, in fact, due to Esther getting a gig with Eamonn that Lorraine would have liked. Sources from the time say that Lorraine was never in the running to stand in next to Eamonn during Fiona Phillips’s maternity leave in 1999.

She was already presenting the hugely popular Lorraine Live show at the end of GMTV — which was a solo slot and a bigger role.

Instead, it is claimed Lorraine wasn’t wild about Esther because she took a job on the show when the expectation was that it would go to the popular, long-serving news presenter Penny Smith.

Penny, who left the programme in 2010, is close pals with Lorraine.

And it’s fair to say the intervening years haven’t made Lorraine any warmer towards Esther.

Lorraine said yesterday: ‘I’m baffled . . . I’ve had my own show since 1992, and I don’t think she joined until five years later.

An icy exchange between GMTV veterans Lorraine Kelly (pictured in her early days) and Esther McVey has revealed yet another behind-the-scenes fault line

‘As far as sharing dressing rooms go . . . it was just a little room everyone shared and we got ready in. It wasn’t a dressing room with couches — it wasn’t palatial at all.

‘I’ll be genuinely honest with you, I don’t remember. It was such a long time ago. My show was totally separate . . . so there was no interaction.’ She added: ‘Yesterday I just got sick to the back teeth of the whole toxic political atmosphere and I thought: “I’ve had enough of this.”

‘I strongly disagree with [Esther] on LGBT rights. And they’ve been going round in circles on Brexit for two years and it’s got to stop.’

Esther voted in Parliament against same-sex marriage.

Meanwhile, Lorraine has been hailed as an ‘honorary gay’ by Attitude magazine and was given an award for her support of the LGBT community at their 2015 awards ceremony.

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OVERCOMING TOUGH STARTS IN LIFE

Both Lorraine and Esther were the children of impoverished teenage parents. Esther’s mum and dad gave her up to a Barnardo’s home for foster care for nearly five years, while Lorraine’s resisted pressure from family to give her up for adoption.

Lorraine was born in 1959. Her mum Anne was 17 and dad John, a TV repairman, 18. The family, including her brother, lived in one room in the Gorbals in Glasgow.

Lorraine said: ‘In one corner, you had your sink and cooker and there was a recess where your bed was.

‘There was an absolutely disgusting outside toilet.’

They later moved to East Kilbride, where Lorraine was thrilled there was a bath, a phone and a bedroom for her. She said: ‘People these days would be horrified and think it Dickensian, but I could not have had a better childhood.’

Lorraine, 59, and Esther, 51, are both proudly self-made women who have raised themselves up from humble beginnings to become successful women of substance (pictured: Esther McVey in her early days)

Esther’s parents, Jimmy and Barbara, were unmarried and aged 22 and 18, respectively, when she was born. They put her in a Barnardo’s home in Liverpool because they couldn’t cope.

After four-and-a-half years, by which time Jimmy had started a building business and bought a small home, they brought her back to live with them.

Esther said: ‘They visited me in the home. They always wanted me back.’

In her later childhood, there was enough money for ballet lessons and for Esther to attend the fee-paying Belvedere School, where she ended up as head girl.

But her family kept her feet on the ground: her chores included polishing shoes and peeling potatoes.

After school, she studied law at Queen Mary University of London. She then completed an MA in radio journalism at City University London.

AMBITION THAT TOOK THEM TO THE TOP

Pictured: Lorraine Kelly attending the TRIC Awards, March 12

Both women have drive and ambition — and both made it in the cut-throat world of television.

Lorraine turned down a place at university to work for a local newspaper. From there, she landed a job as a BBC Scotland researcher and then as a TV-am reporter in Scotland in 1983.

Her broadcasting in the wake of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing led to her being asked to go to London and join the main show. She said: ‘It’s quite difficult to live with the fact that dreadful, horrendous terrorist atrocity resulted in my getting one of the best jobs ever.’

Lorraine was a chief presenter on Good Morning Britain from 1990 and on the team that launched GMTV in 1993. By 2010, she was a standalone item. In 2012, she was awarded an OBE for services to charity and the Armed Forces.

Esther’s TV career is rather less impressive. She got her big break after her father filmed her doing a three-minute demo tape about Liverpool and was hired to present a summer slot on Children’s BBC in 1991. She presented reports on GMTV from 1993 and, in 1996, worked on How Do They Do That?

From there, she had jobs presenting on The Heaven And Earth Show and Channel 5’s Night Fever, before getting her big break — covering for Fiona Phillips in 1999.

In 2000, she made her last mainstream television series, Shopping City. She then went into business, followed by politics.

A FEW SCANDALS ALONG THE WAY 

Each of them has overcome bumps in the road. In 2013, Esther, MP for Tatton, was formally reprimanded for using House of Commons stationery and postage while electioneering for the Tories. Five years later, more seriously, the National Audit Office reported that she had misled Parliament over the Universal Credit Scheme, ICONWIN claming the NAO said it ought to be rolled out faster, when actually the report said it should be paused.

She apologised to the House and faced calls to resign (which she did four months later, over Brexit).

She has been Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Deputy Chief Whip and Minister for Employment. She says: ‘I want to be leader because I believe in the timeless values of Conservatism.’

Esther McVey speaks at an event to launch her leadership bid for Conservative Party Leader in Central London, June 10, 2019

In March this year, Lorraine was embroiled in a row over a £1.2 million tax bill — which she won, after a judge accepted that ‘Lorraine Kelly’ as seen on TV is not actually her, but a television persona.

Kelly was hit with a huge National Insurance and income tax bill in 2016 after HMRC claimed she was an ITV employee, not a freelancer.

Judge Jennifer Dean ruled the relationship Lorraine had with ITV ‘was a contract for services and not that of employer and employee’.

She said: ‘We did not accept that Ms Kelly simply appeared as herself — we were satisfied that Ms Kelly presents a persona of herself, she presents herself as a brand and that is the brand ITV sought when engaging her. All parts of the show are a performance, the act being to perform the role of a friendly, chatty and fun personality.’

SO WHO HAS MADE THE MOST MONEY?

Lorraine, easily. She is said to be worth at least £6 million and is under contract with ITV, which pays her £800,000 a year. She has had a long-term relationship with the beauty brand Dove and, since 2015, has been fronting homeware and clothes ranges for retailer JD Williams, which may bring in a further £200,000 a year.

For the past three years, she has also been the face of furniture and furnishings retailer Wayfair.

Not to mention the ‘Lorraine’ brand — she has released three fitness DVDs, a baby and toddler cookbook, a guide to Scotland, an autobiography and a beauty book.

Her most recent accounts show her firm has total assets of £3 million, with £2.3 million cash in the bank. It paid £500,000 in dividends and its directors are Lorraine and her husband, Steven Smith. By comparison, Esther’s account books are not quite so rosy.

Between TV and politics, she set up in business with a firm, Making It, offering training advice. In 2014, it was £56,000 in the red and its final accounts before it closed down show debts of £15,000.

During this time, she did an MSc at Liverpool John Moores University and was on the board of her father’s demolition and construction firm.

She has a house in Liverpool’s West Kirby and also shares a flat in London with her fiance, MP Philip Davies. Her MP’s salary is £79,468. 

HOW THEY BOTH FOUND LOVE 

Here, the women have contrasting fortunes. Lorraine met Steve, a cameraman, on TV-am, 30 years ago and they married in 1992.

Daughter Rosie was born in 1994 and now lives in Singapore, where she works for a charity.

For years, Lorraine and Steve lived apart during the week, with Lorraine staying in London while her husband resided in Dundee with their daughter. Last year, the couple sold Lorraine’s £1.5 million pied-a-terre in Central London and their £845,000 seven-bedroom house in Broughty Ferry, outside Dundee, to move to an idyllic riverside house in Buckinghamshire.

The home, near Bourne End, has a separate guest house and mooring.

Lorraine said: ‘Steve and I want to be together a bit more. For years, I’ve been travelling up and down from our home in Dundee to London to do my show, and not only has it been exhausting, we’ve really missed each other.

‘It’s really about downsizing. The house was too big for just two people, and now is a really good time for us to be living close to London.’ They are also within a stone’s throw of the Clooneys, Theresa May and Russell Brand.

Esther, meanwhile, was one half of a media power couple with fellow Liverpudlian Mal Young, a producer who, at the time, was head of drama at the BBC.

They did a cover for Hello! magazine in 1999, but split the following year.

She moved on to a romance with Tory MP Ed Vaizey. It is reported that he was so besotted that he repeatedly asked Esther to marry him during their year-long courtship.

But then, around 2011 she met Philip Davies, a divorced Tory MP. They’ve been dating for the past four years. She has said: ‘I always knew they [her previous partners] weren’t the right one and, when I met Phil, I knew that he was.’

She added: ‘I was attracted to his cracking sense of humour. He makes me laugh so much. And he is the most supportive man I have ever met. He’s been there for me in good times and bad.’

On her decision not to have children, Esther said: ‘I believe in choice. And I always knew if I had a kid, I would want to give that little person all my time, like my mother did for me, taking me to sports events, ballet lessons, trampolining and all that.

‘I would have given up whatever I was doing to be a full-time mum.’ 

LOOKING GOOD… 

Lorraine insists she looks better now than she did in her 30s — and few would disagree. She credits Zumba classes, plus good genes, and decries the use of Botox as her ‘pet hate in the world’.

The low-maintenance star barely wears jewellery and eschews designer dresses, though her hair is cut and coloured at the leading Jo Hansford salon.

One other indulgence is exotic travel, with recent holidays to Bali, Indonesia and Vietnam.

Esther, meanwhile, is famous for having the best hair in Westminster. During a row with Chancellor Philip Hammond last year over claims of a £2 billion black hole in the welfare budget, one Treasury source sniped that ‘the only thing she knows how to do well is a blow-dry’.

Esther sees a mobile hairdresser at her Cheshire constituency home once every three months for highlights, and dries and styles it herself.

And, like Lorraine, she feels at her peak right now, saying: ‘I have become more confident with age.’

 

Esther (my ex-client) is a showbiz pariah now 

By Jon Roseman, ex-showbusiness agent  

Esther McVey MP gives keynote speech at Bruges Group meeting, June 10

That look on Lorraine Kelly’s face when Piers Morgan asked her this week if she remembered working with Esther McVey was priceless.

Within minutes, social media was ablaze with speculation that the sainted Lorraine hadn’t liked her former colleague and current Tory leadership candidate.

Let me set the record straight. The truth is few people at GMTV back in the Nineties liked Esther McVey, then a presenter who’d appeared on children’s TV.

She was widely perceived as the girl who took someone else’s job from under their nose. Worse than that, she exuded the same lack of warmth that, to me, has characterised her political career. Esther had no empathy.

I should know. In the Nineties, I was the agent for nearly three-quarters of the talent at GMTV, including Esther. Establishing any real relationship with her, though, was difficult — the emotional coolness you saw on screen was the same in real life.

This all came to the fore when it was announced GMTV co-host Fiona Phillips was about to take six months’ maternity leave.

Everybody expected the editor of the breakfast show, the late Peter McHugh, would promote Penny Smith — who, at the time, presented the hour-long slot from 6am — on to the sofa with Eamonn Holmes for the main event, a two-hour show that kicked off at 7am.

But, 72 hours before Penny was due to start, Peter called me. He’d changed his mind and instead wanted Esther. In his eyes, she was a safer pair of hands.

Penny was a maverick presenter. You could never predict what she was going to say and her sense of humour was decidedly quirky. That, of course, was what viewers loved about her, but it made the top brass nervous. And McHugh didn’t think he could risk too many of her off-script antics.

I thought he was wrong, and told him so. Penny was also one of my clients and, by coincidence, I was having dinner with her that evening. It was the most horrible dinner of my professional career.

Within minutes, social media was ablaze with speculation that the sainted Lorraine hadn’t liked her former colleague and current Tory leadership candidate

When I broke the bad news, there were tears. Penny is resilient and a professional, but she couldn’t disguise how upset and betrayed she felt. She was also popular around the studios.

Everyone loved her and, when she wasn’t sitting beside Eamonn on Monday morning, there was a lot of muttering backstage.

So, knowing what I do, I was amazed to now read that Esther seemingly attributes any bad blood between her and Lorraine Kelly to jealousy over that bad business — as if Lorraine had ever wanted to be Fiona’s stand-in. That’s plain ridiculous.

Lorraine had fronted her own morning show for years. She was a far bigger star than Esther, and at least on a par with Eamonn.

Esther knows that perfectly well. She also knows it was Penny she pipped to the sofa at the last minute. To say anything else, in my view, is sheer fabrication.

But Esther’s stint in the limelight was not a happy one. A disgruntled McHugh soon called me to confide that all his audience polls and focus groups showed that viewers didn’t like Esther.

He blamed her Scouse accent: many people said they found it hard to understand. Maybe he was right, but I don’t recall it did Cilla any harm.

The problem wasn’t the voice, it was the tone behind it. Esther had none of that cheeky warmth we associate with Liverpudlians.

But I’d already guessed that the public hadn’t taken to Esther — after three months, I hadn’t received a single job offer for her following her sudden rise to be Eamonn’s co-star. TV exposure such as that usually generates a flood of calls.

Esther couldn’t understand it. She and her boyfriend at the time, BBC producer Mal Young, insisted that I handle her career: all myself, in person.

But the phone still didn’t ring. I’m not a miracle worker.

These days, there’s a perception the MP for Tatton looks down her nose at her ‘showbiz years’. Only she will know if that’s true.

What I can say with certainty is that she has fallen out with several former colleagues — not least because of her conservative positions on gay marriage and other LGBT causes.

Homophobia is never tolerated in the entertainment business. A significant number of television celebrities are gay or lesbian, as are some of the most important interviewees.

By voting against gay marriage, Esther has made herself a pariah among her old colleagues. Though it must be said: they didn’t really like her to start with.

Jon Roseman is a former showbusiness agent and author of the memoir From Here To . . . Obscurity.

Conservatives

April 5 (Reuters) – The next edition of the Asian Cup will be held in Qatar from Jan. 12 to Feb. 10 in 2024, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) confirmed on Wednesday.

ICONWIN \u2013 Slot Deposit Pulsa TerpercayaThe quadrennial continental championship was awarded to China in 2019 but the world’s most populous country relinquished the rights this year as it pursued a zero-COVID policy.

Qatar, which hosted the men’s World Cup finals last year, was then named the host after the Gulf state was preferred to bids from South Korea and ICONWIN Indonesia.

The 24-team tournament has been moved from mid-2023 to early 2024 to avoid the heat of the Gulf summer.

Qatar has staged the Asian Cup twice, in 1988 and 2011 and it won the last tournament in the United Arab Emirates in 2019.

The AFC said that the tournament will be staged across eight stadiums, six of which were used during the World Cup, where Argentina were winners.

The Asian Cup will coincide with the Africa Cup of Nations finals, which will run from Jan. 13-Feb. 11 in Ivory Coast. (Reporting by Manasi Pathak in Bengaluru Editing by Christian Radnedge)

Hardline Islamist groups depend on a charity box scam to pay for operations across Indonesia, which has suffered a series of hotel bombings and other attacks over the years

Generous Indonesians donating their spare change to the poor and needy are unwittingly helping finance deadly terror attacks and jihadist training camps, in a scam that has netted big money for ICONWIN extremist groups.

Former radical Khairul Ghazali once spent his days visiting restaurants, convenience stores and supermarkets to drop off charity boxes, wearing an official-looking uniform to avoid suspicion.

Passers-by would slot in coins and crumpled banknotes in the belief that they were helping the impoverished, orphaned children or maybe a Palestinian aid organisation.

But Ghazali’s boxes secretly belonged to Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) — the notorious network behind Indonesia’s deadliest terror attack, the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings.

“People can’t tell the difference between these and other charity boxes,” said Ghazali, 56, who now runs an Islamic boarding school and tries to de-radicalise former extremists.

“The money collected is usually used to pay for terrorism.”

With little outside funding, hardline Islamist groups depend on the charity box scam to pay for operations across Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation, which has suffered a series of hotel bombings and other attacks over the years.

A militant arrested last year told police that one foundation linked to JI, which masterminded the 2002 Bali bombings, was running more than 20,000 illicit charity boxes nationwide

North Sumatra police said in March they had seized more than 500 boxes suspected to be funding pipelines for the Islamic State group and radicals linked to Al-Qaeda.

The seizure, weeks before an IS-inspired married couple blew themselves up at a church on Good Friday, was the tip of the iceberg.

A JI militant arrested last year admitted that one foundation linked to the notorious terror group was running more than 20,000 boxes nationwide, police said at the time.

– ‘Massive scale’-

There are no official figures on the number of illicit charity boxes around Indonesia, but experts believe they are in every city and region across the sprawling Southeast Asian archipelago.

“This is not new but the scale of it, which is now massive, is something new,” said Jakarta-based security analyst Sidney Jones.

Most Indonesian terror groups now rely “overwhelmingly” on domestic funding to pay for day-to-day operations, she said.

Terror groups have also raised cash from member and sympathiser donations, online fundraising and laundering money through legitimate businesses, such as Indonesia’s many palm oil plantations.

“But the attacks that have happened after the Bali Bombing have been mainly funded through charity box funds,” Ghazali said.

Funds from the scam have been traced to jihadist training camps in ultra-conservative Aceh province and the East Indonesia Mujahideen, a radical group blamed for beheading four Christian farmers on the island of Sulawesi last month.

They are also used to help families of radicals jailed or killed by Indonesia’s counter-terror squad, and police suspect they have been used to pay for jihadist trips to Syria.

It has proved a dependable way for extremists to raise funds under the radar with one box raising about $350 every six months or so, Ghazali said.

“It is more convenient and risk-free,” he added.

“There’s no chance of bloodshed like in a robbery.”

Ghazali spent five years in prison for masterminding a 2010 bank heist — once a staple funding source for extremist groups — that left a security guard dead.

It was around this time that terror groups began turning their back on robbery and other risky crimes in favour of more covert fundraising methods.

– ‘Dangerous habit’ –

Illicit boxes are usually linked to foundations backed by extremist groups, or their sympathisers — and registered with authorities to appear legitimate.

They’re required to report income and some revenue usually does go to charitable causes.

But that is after money is siphoned off to fund extremist operations.

“So, there are actually orphans or poor people being taken care of through these boxes, but it’s a cover up,” University of Indonesia terrorism expert Ridlwan Habib told AFP.

The cash nature of donations makes it tough for authorities to root out shady organisations.

“That’s how they can survive for years by raising money this way without being noticed,” Ghazali said.

And the scheme’s success means that extremists are likely to keep manipulating the goodwill of Indonesians, who are among the world’s most generous in terms of charitable giving.

“Indonesians like to donate money and they’ll give away 2,000 or 5,000 rupiah (15 to 35 cents) without thinking twice,” said Sofyan Tsauri, a former militant familiar with the scheme.

“But it can be a dangerous habit because you don’t know how the money is being used.”

Some in North Sumatra were shocked when police revealed the scam had been operating in the province this year.

“My intention is only to help others when I donate money,” said Medan resident Sri Mulyani.

“I never thought it would be used for terrorism.”

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The off-screen cliques and feuds were such that the joke was GMTV stood for ‘grumpy, moody, tired and vicious’. There was a famous falling- out (since mended) between Eamonn Holmes and Anthea Turner, during which he supposedly called his highly paid co-host ‘Princess Tippy Toes’ and said he would quit if she wasn’t sacked.

Then there were reports of a froideur between Eamonn and Fiona Phillips — she recently observed that he was better paid and also got perks she ‘wasn’t deemed worthy of’.

Now, an icy exchange between GMTV veterans Lorraine Kelly and Esther McVey (who is also a Tory leadership hopeful), has revealed yet another behind-the-scenes fault line. First, on Monday, Good Morning Britain host Piers Morgan did a link asking Lorraine if she remembered McVey from the days they both worked at ITV. Lorraine gave a short: ‘Yep. Yes I do’ and made not even a token attempt to appear anything other than hostile.

That awkward TV moment: Esther and Lorraine during Monday’s confrontation

Esther tried to defuse speculation of a feud by saying Lorraine was only peeved — and, by implication, jealous — because she had once leapfrogged her in a promotion.

Esther said: ‘She used to be partnered with Eamonn Holmes and then I was promoted to be partnering with Eamonn Holmes.’

Lorraine hit back, saying she didn’t remember any interaction with Esther during the four months they overlapped, and claiming the issue between them is political — she hates Esther’s stance on LGBT rights and is ‘sick to the back teeth’ of the ‘toxic political atmosphere’.

Lorraine, 59, and Esther, 51, are both proudly self-made women who have raised themselves up from humble beginnings to become successful women of substance.

But, as ALISON BOSHOFF reveals, the animosity runs a little deeper than mere politics…

WHAT’S THE SPAT REALLY ALL ABOUT?

It’s been claimed the bad blood is not, in fact, due to Esther getting a gig with Eamonn that Lorraine would have liked. Sources from the time say that Lorraine was never in the running to stand in next to Eamonn during Fiona Phillips’s maternity leave in 1999.

She was already presenting the hugely popular Lorraine Live show at the end of GMTV — which was a solo slot and a bigger role.

Instead, it is claimed Lorraine wasn’t wild about Esther because she took a job on the show when the expectation was that it would go to the popular, long-serving news presenter Penny Smith.

Penny, who left the programme in 2010, is close pals with Lorraine.

And it’s fair to say the intervening years haven’t made Lorraine any warmer towards Esther.

Lorraine said yesterday: ‘I’m baffled . . . I’ve had my own show since 1992, and I don’t think she joined until five years later.

An icy exchange between GMTV veterans Lorraine Kelly (pictured in her early days) and Esther McVey has revealed yet another behind-the-scenes fault line

‘As far as sharing dressing rooms go . . . it was just a little room everyone shared and we got ready in. It wasn’t a dressing room with couches — it wasn’t palatial at all.

‘I’ll be genuinely honest with you, I don’t remember. It was such a long time ago. My show was totally separate . . . so there was no interaction.’ She added: ‘Yesterday I just got sick to the back teeth of the whole toxic political atmosphere and I thought: “I’ve had enough of this.”

‘I strongly disagree with [Esther] on LGBT rights. And they’ve been going round in circles on Brexit for two years and it’s got to stop.’

Esther voted in Parliament against same-sex marriage.

Meanwhile, Lorraine has been hailed as an ‘honorary gay’ by Attitude magazine and was given an award for her support of the LGBT community at their 2015 awards ceremony.

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Who’s made a KILLING out of EVE? ALISON BOSHOFF on who has… In Game Of Thrones, he was the last hero standing, but in…

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OVERCOMING TOUGH STARTS IN LIFE

Both Lorraine and Esther were the children of impoverished teenage parents. Esther’s mum and dad gave her up to a Barnardo’s home for foster care for nearly five years, while Lorraine’s resisted pressure from family to give her up for adoption.

Lorraine was born in 1959. Her mum Anne was 17 and dad John, a TV repairman, 18. The family, including her brother, lived in one room in the Gorbals in Glasgow.

Lorraine said: ‘In one corner, you had your sink and cooker and there was a recess where your bed was.

‘There was an absolutely disgusting outside toilet.’

They later moved to East Kilbride, where Lorraine was thrilled there was a bath, a phone and a bedroom for her. She said: ‘People these days would be horrified and think it Dickensian, but I could not have had a better childhood.’

Lorraine, 59, and Esther, 51, are both proudly self-made women who have raised themselves up from humble beginnings to become successful women of substance (pictured: Esther McVey in her early days)

Esther’s parents, Jimmy and Barbara, were unmarried and aged 22 and 18, respectively, when she was born. They put her in a Barnardo’s home in Liverpool because they couldn’t cope.

After four-and-a-half years, by which time Jimmy had started a building business and bought a small home, they brought her back to live with them.

Esther said: ‘They visited me in the home. They always wanted me back.’

In her later childhood, there was enough money for ballet lessons and for Esther to attend the fee-paying Belvedere School, where she ended up as head girl.

But her family kept her feet on the ground: her chores included polishing shoes and peeling potatoes.

After school, she studied law at Queen Mary University of London. She then completed an MA in radio journalism at City University London.

AMBITION THAT TOOK THEM TO THE TOP

Pictured: Lorraine Kelly attending the TRIC Awards, March 12

Both women have drive and ambition — and both made it in the cut-throat world of television.

Lorraine turned down a place at university to work for a local newspaper. From there, she landed a job as a BBC Scotland researcher and then as a TV-am reporter in Scotland in 1983.

Her broadcasting in the wake of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing led to her being asked to go to London and join the main show. She said: ‘It’s quite difficult to live with the fact that dreadful, horrendous terrorist atrocity resulted in my getting one of the best jobs ever.’

Lorraine was a chief presenter on Good Morning Britain from 1990 and on the team that launched GMTV in 1993. By 2010, she was a standalone item. In 2012, she was awarded an OBE for services to charity and the Armed Forces.

Esther’s TV career is rather less impressive. She got her big break after her father filmed her doing a three-minute demo tape about Liverpool and was hired to present a summer slot on Children’s BBC in 1991. She presented reports on GMTV from 1993 and, in 1996, worked on How Do They Do That?

From there, she had jobs presenting on The Heaven And Earth Show and Channel 5’s Night Fever, before getting her big break — covering for Fiona Phillips in 1999.

In 2000, she made her last mainstream television series, Shopping City. She then went into business, followed by politics.

A FEW SCANDALS ALONG THE WAY 

Each of them has overcome bumps in the road. In 2013, Esther, MP for Tatton, was formally reprimanded for using House of Commons stationery and postage while electioneering for the Tories. Five years later, more seriously, the National Audit Office reported that she had misled Parliament over the Universal Credit Scheme, claming the NAO said it ought to be rolled out faster, when actually the report said it should be paused.

She apologised to the House and faced calls to resign (which she did four months later, over Brexit).

She has been Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Deputy Chief Whip and Minister for Employment. She says: ‘I want to be leader because I believe in the timeless values of Conservatism.’

Esther McVey speaks at an event to launch her leadership bid for Conservative Party Leader in Central London, June 10, 2019

In March this year, Lorraine was embroiled in a row over a £1.2 million tax bill — which she won, after a judge accepted that ‘Lorraine Kelly’ as seen on TV is not actually her, but a television persona.

Kelly was hit with a huge National Insurance and income tax bill in 2016 after HMRC claimed she was an ITV employee, not a freelancer.

Judge Jennifer Dean ruled the relationship Lorraine had with ITV ‘was a contract for services and not that of employer and employee’.

She said: ‘We did not accept that Ms Kelly simply appeared as herself — we were satisfied that Ms Kelly presents a persona of herself, she presents herself as a brand and that is the brand ITV sought when engaging her. All parts of the show are a performance, the act being to perform the role of a friendly, chatty and fun personality.’

SO WHO HAS MADE THE MOST MONEY?

Lorraine, easily. She is said to be worth at least £6 million and is under contract with ITV, which pays her £800,000 a year. She has had a long-term relationship with the beauty brand Dove and, since 2015, has been fronting homeware and clothes ranges for retailer JD Williams, which may bring in a further £200,000 a year.

For the past three years, she has also been the face of furniture and furnishings retailer Wayfair.

Not to mention the ‘Lorraine’ brand — she has released three fitness DVDs, a baby and toddler cookbook, a guide to Scotland, an autobiography and a beauty book.

Her most recent accounts show her firm has total assets of £3 million, with £2.3 million cash in the bank. It paid £500,000 in dividends and its directors are Lorraine and her husband, Steven Smith. By comparison, Esther’s account books are not quite so rosy.

Between TV and politics, she set up in business with a firm, Making It, offering training advice. In 2014, it was £56,000 in the red and its final accounts before it closed down show debts of £15,000.

During this time, she did an MSc at Liverpool John Moores University and was on the board of her father’s demolition and construction firm.

She has a house in Liverpool’s West Kirby and also shares a flat in London with her fiance, MP Philip Davies. Her MP’s salary is £79,468. 

HOW THEY BOTH FOUND LOVE 

Here, the women have contrasting fortunes. Lorraine met Steve, a cameraman, on TV-am, 30 years ago and they married in 1992.

Daughter Rosie was born in 1994 and now lives in Singapore, where she works for a charity.

For years, Lorraine and Steve lived apart during the week, with Lorraine staying in London while her husband resided in Dundee with their daughter. Last year, the couple sold Lorraine’s £1.5 million pied-a-terre in Central London and their £845,000 seven-bedroom house in Broughty Ferry, outside Dundee, to move to an idyllic riverside house in Buckinghamshire.

The home, near Bourne End, has a separate guest house and mooring.

Lorraine said: ‘Steve and I want to be together a bit more. For years, I’ve been travelling up and down from our home in Dundee to London to do my show, and not only has it been exhausting, we’ve really missed each other.

‘It’s really about downsizing. The house was too big for just two people, and now is a really good time for us to be living close to London.’ They are also within a stone’s throw of the Clooneys, Theresa May and Russell Brand.

Esther, meanwhile, was one half of a media power couple with fellow Liverpudlian Mal Young, a producer who, at the time, was head of drama at the BBC.

They did a cover for Hello! magazine in 1999, but split the following year.

She moved on to a romance with Tory MP Ed Vaizey. It is reported that he was so besotted that he repeatedly asked Esther to marry him during their year-long courtship.

But then, around 2011 she met Philip Davies, a divorced Tory MP. They’ve been dating for the past four years. She has said: ‘I always knew they [her previous partners] weren’t the right one and, when I met Phil, I knew that he was.’

She added: ‘I was attracted to his cracking sense of humour. He makes me laugh so much. And he is the most supportive man I have ever met. He’s been there for me in good times and bad.’

On her decision not to have children, Esther said: ‘I believe in choice. And I always knew if I had a kid, I would want to give that little person all my time, like my mother did for me, taking me to sports events, ballet lessons, trampolining and all that.

‘I would have given up whatever I was doing to be a full-time mum.’ 

LOOKING GOOD… 

Lorraine insists she looks better now than she did in her 30s — and few would disagree. She credits Zumba classes, plus good genes, and decries the use of Botox as her ‘pet hate in the world’.

The low-maintenance star barely wears jewellery and eschews designer dresses, though her hair is cut and coloured at the leading Jo Hansford salon.

One other indulgence is exotic travel, with recent holidays to Bali, Indonesia and Vietnam.

Esther, meanwhile, is famous for having the best hair in Westminster. During a row with Chancellor Philip Hammond last year over claims of a £2 billion black hole in the welfare budget, one Treasury source sniped that ‘the only thing she knows how to do well is a blow-dry’.

Esther sees a mobile hairdresser at her Cheshire constituency home once every three months for highlights, and dries and styles it herself.

And, like Lorraine, she feels at her peak right now, saying: ‘I have become more confident with age.’

 

Esther (my ex-client) is a showbiz pariah now 

By Jon Roseman, ex-showbusiness agent  

Esther McVey MP gives keynote speech at Bruges Group meeting, June 10

That look on Lorraine Kelly’s face when Piers Morgan asked her this week if she remembered working with Esther McVey was priceless.

Within minutes, social media was ablaze with speculation that the sainted Lorraine hadn’t liked her former colleague and current Tory leadership candidate.

Let me set the record straight. The truth is few people at GMTV back in the Nineties liked Esther McVey, then a presenter who’d appeared on children’s TV.

She was widely perceived as the girl who took someone else’s job from under their nose. Worse than that, she exuded the same lack of warmth that, to me, has characterised her political career. Esther had no empathy.

I should know. In the Nineties, I was the agent for nearly three-quarters of the talent at GMTV, including Esther. Establishing any real relationship with her, though, was difficult — the emotional coolness you saw on screen was the same in real life.

This all came to the fore when it was announced GMTV co-host Fiona Phillips was about to take six months’ maternity leave.

Everybody expected the editor of the breakfast show, the late Peter McHugh, would promote Penny Smith — who, at the time, presented the hour-long slot from 6am — on to the sofa with Eamonn Holmes for the main event, a two-hour show that kicked off at 7am.

But, 72 hours before Penny was due to start, Peter called me. He’d changed his mind and instead wanted Esther. In his eyes, she was a safer pair of hands.

Penny was a maverick presenter. You could never predict what she was going to say and her sense of humour was decidedly quirky. That, of course, was what viewers loved about her, but it made the top brass nervous. And McHugh didn’t think he could risk too many of her off-script antics.

I thought he was wrong, and told him so. Penny was also one of my clients and, by coincidence, I was having dinner with her that evening. It was the most horrible dinner of my professional career.

Within minutes, social media was ablaze with speculation that the sainted Lorraine hadn’t liked her former colleague and current Tory leadership candidate

When I broke the bad news, there were tears. Penny is resilient and a professional, but she couldn’t disguise how upset and betrayed she felt. She was also popular around the studios.

Everyone loved her and, when she wasn’t sitting beside Eamonn on Monday morning, there was a lot of muttering backstage.

So, knowing what I do, I was amazed to now read that Esther seemingly attributes any bad blood between her and Lorraine Kelly to jealousy over that bad business — as if Lorraine had ever wanted to be Fiona’s stand-in. That’s plain ridiculous.

Lorraine had fronted her own morning show for years. She was a far bigger star than Esther, and at least on a par with Eamonn.

Esther knows that perfectly well. She also knows it was Penny she pipped to the sofa at the last minute. To say anything else, in my view, is sheer fabrication.

But Esther’s stint in the limelight was not a happy one. A disgruntled McHugh soon called me to confide that all his audience polls and focus groups showed that viewers didn’t like Esther.

He blamed her Scouse accent: ICONWIN many people said they found it hard to understand. Maybe he was right, but I don’t recall it did Cilla any harm.

The problem wasn’t the voice, it was the tone behind it. Esther had none of that cheeky warmth we associate with Liverpudlians.

But I’d already guessed that the public hadn’t taken to Esther — after three months, I hadn’t received a single job offer for her following her sudden rise to be Eamonn’s co-star. TV exposure such as that usually generates a flood of calls.

Esther couldn’t understand it. She and her boyfriend at the time, BBC producer Mal Young, insisted that I handle her career: all myself, in person.

But the phone still didn’t ring. I’m not a miracle worker.

These days, there’s a perception the MP for Tatton looks down her nose at her ‘showbiz years’. Only she will know if that’s true.

What I can say with certainty is that she has fallen out with several former colleagues — not least because of her conservative positions on gay marriage and other LGBT causes.

Homophobia is never tolerated in the entertainment business. A significant number of television celebrities are gay or lesbian, as are some of the most important interviewees.

By voting against gay marriage, Esther has made herself a pariah among her old colleagues. Though it must be said: they didn’t really like her to start with.

Jon Roseman is a former showbusiness agent and author of the memoir From Here To . . . Obscurity.

Conservatives