Love Island 2016 star Sophie Gradon, who claimed she 'sold her soul to reality TV', was found dead at her parents' home last night at the age of 32. The former Miss Great Britain shot to fame after she became one half of the first bisexual couple on the ITV2 show and had sex with a male co-star in a wardrobe. Police yesterday rushed to the £960,000 family home in Medburn near Newcastle, where they found Sophie dead. Her heartbroken boyfriend Aaron Armstrong, who Sophie branded 'The One' on social media hours before her death, penned: 'I will never forget that smile I love you so so much baby your my world forever'. Sophie, who attended the £4,400-a-term Dame Allan's School in Newcastle, documented her struggle with anxiety and depression on social media. She told her Twitter followers in September: 'Hi guys, no not dead just battling a little bit of depression. I'll come back I promise x.' The model was friends with popular bar owner...
According to Lauretta Onochie, many young Nigerians are running after President Buhari because he is their hope for a better Nigeria ''The more they are spiteful of his age, the more young people run after him. He's their hope for a better Nigeria. At least, they know he will never steal from them, Instead, he insists that tuition fees must be abolished. He's in politics to protect the future of our youth' She Wrote on Twitter:
Nearly 30 years after leaving Hunter College without a degree, the brawny actor was awarded an honorary Ph.D. as he gave the school’s commencement speech at Radio City Music Hall on Wednesday. The “Fast & Furious” franchise star was born Mark Sinclair in California, but grew up in the Big Apple — living first in Washington Heights, and then later in Brooklyn. He attended Hunter for three years in the 1980s before leaving early to pursue his acting career in Hollywood. “While I was in Hollywood I always had this pride of Hunter College,” the star told a crowd of about 1,800 students, pacing the stage in Hunter-purple academic regalia. “I would tell everybody that I learned and took so much away from my experience at Hunter College: I was young, I was a bouncer, when I wasn’t bouncing I was in these classrooms with the most diverse student body on the planet.” We're strivers," he added. "We can overcome anything. You learn that here and you take (that) into the wor...
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