logo
Love Island's Georgia Harrison: 'I re-read my MBE letter three times'

Love Island's Georgia Harrison: 'I re-read my MBE letter three times'

Yahoo13-06-2025

The sexual abuse campaigner and former reality star Georgia Harrison has told the BBC she is "honoured" to be receiving an MBE.
Harrison, 30, will be awarded for her efforts to tackle violence against women and girls, which includes working with the government on the Online Safety Act in 2023.
She says she feels "a responsibility to help" the many women who are victims of crimes such as intimate image abuse and deepfaking.
Her ex-partner Stephen Bear was jailed for 21 months in 2023 after uploading sexual footage of himself and Harrison to OnlyFans filmed without her consent.
Harrison, who is being awarded her MBE as part of the King's Birthday Honours, said she had to re-read the letter she received from King Charles "three times" as she "just couldn't believe it".
"It's definitely not something I anticipated and it feels nice to have my work recognised because with campaigning sometimes you feel like a lot goes unnoticed," she told the BBC.
The former reality star appeared on ITV shows such as The Only Way is Essex in 2017 and Love Island in 2018, where she entered the villa as a bombshell and gained nationwide fame.
It was during 2019 that she entered MTV's The Challenge, where she met fellow reality star Bear.
The pair dated on and off for a few months, with Harrison discovering in December 2020 that the now 35-year-old Bear had uploaded intimate CCTV footage of them to streaming service OnlyFans without her consent.
She subsequently reported the crime and Bear was sentenced after being found guilty of voyeurism and discussing private, sexual photographs and films.
Harrison was then awarded compensation in a damages claim and said she would donate some of the £207,900 to charity.
She says she often feels a "responsibility to help" as she worries about the increase of social media influencers fuelling misogyny and sexism.
Harrison, who is currently expecting her first child, said: "I'd be scared to have a teenager right now, being completely honest, I really would be terrified".
"We've seen with the rise of Andrew Tate and some men thinking the thing to do with women is to mistreat them and think they can do what they want with them," she said.
She added she feels the need to let women know, "they deserve to be treated fairly, they deserve consent and the right to their own bodies".
A recent poll of teachers in the UK found three in five believe social media use has had a negative effect on behaviour in schools - with Tate being named as a reason by a number of teachers in the poll.
Harrison says she has been into some schools recently to watch consent workshops with primary school age children, describing them as "brilliant".
She hopes that these type of lessons will have an impact for the next generation.
"I'd like to think by the time my child gets to the age where consent becomes an issue, things are going to be a lot better, because we are doing something to educate around consent and that's something that's never really been done before in this generation," she added.
Harrison says "on a positive note" women have told her case and "the strength you found" has encouraged them to take their perpetrators to court for causes of rape, domestic abuse and intimate image abuse.
Since Bear's conviction in 2022, she has campaigned to increase the support for women and girls who have faced similar crimes to her by working on the Online Safety Act and as part of the Women and Equalities Committee.
She says she has been working with the committee on improving timescales for women who want to report crimes against them - as currently they only have six months after a crime has taken place to tell the police about it.
"It took me about four months to even realise a crime had been committed to me when it happened so its scary to think, had I been notified a few months later, I may not have had the right to justice.
"It should be a lot easier for women out there," she added.
Harrison says she has also been receiving more and more messages from victims of deepfakes, which are videos, pictures or audio clips made with AI to look or sound real.
There have been recent concerns about schoolchildren using apps to distribute AI-generated deepfake content, despite the practice being illegal.
The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) - a UK-based charity partly funded by tech firms - said in February there had been 245 reports of AI-generated child sexual abuse in 2024 compared with 51 in 2023, a 380% increase.
"I think [deepfake] technology is getting a lot more impressive and easier to access," Harrison said.
Earlier this year, the government announced laws to tackle the threat of child sexual abuse images being generated by AI, which include making it illegal to possess, create, or distribute AI tools designed to create such material.
Georgia Harrison launches sexual consent campaign
Harrison says revenge porn experience like 'grief'
Stephen Bear ordered to pay £27k over sex tape

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police seek ‘answers' on criminal John Palmer's killer 10 years on
Police seek ‘answers' on criminal John Palmer's killer 10 years on

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Police seek ‘answers' on criminal John Palmer's killer 10 years on

Police have launched a fresh appeal for information about the murder of notorious criminal John 'Goldfinger' Palmer on the tenth anniversary of his death. The 65-year-old, once described as Britain's richest criminal, was found dead in the garden of his remote woodland home in South Weald, Essex, on June 24 2015. It is thought his killer entered the garden over the fence and shot Mr Palmer six times with a pistol as he was outside burning rubbish on a bonfire. Essex Police originally thought he had died of natural causes because of recent keyhole surgery to his chest, but it later emerged that officers had not properly inspected his body and he had been murdered in a suspected contract killing. A hole found in the fence suggested the killer may have been watching him in the days prior to the murder, the force said. Mr Palmer's killer remains at large despite detectives exploring hundreds of lines of inquiry and examining thousands of pieces of evidence over the last decade. The appeal comes amid a renewed focus on Mr Palmer's life because of the BBC drama series The Gold. Mr Palmer gained his 'Goldfinger' nickname after being acquitted of handling gold bullion in the £26 million Brink's-Mat raid in 1983, with the show's first season telling the story of the raid. Detective Superintendent Stephen Jennings said: 'Ten years on from John's death and the pain has not gone away for his family. They still rightly want answers as to who murdered him and why. 'His killing was a brutal, planned execution – he was shot multiple times in the grounds of his own home. 'Over the years there has been much commentary, media coverage and even television programmes speculating about his connections to the underworld, high-profile crimes and his past – but whatever someone's past, John was a father, partner and much loved by his family. 'His murder was callous and calculated.' Mr Palmer was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2001 for a £33 million timeshare fraud which had 16,000 potential victims. He was also being investigated by the Spanish authorities and was due to stand trial over alleged property fraud involving properties in Tenerife and Spain in 2017, with several other individuals involved in the scheme subsequently found guilty and sentenced. Mr Jennings said the the key to solving Mr Palmer's murder 'lies within the underworld' and the force suspected it was linked to the fraud trial. He added: 'In the years since his death a lot has changed within the criminal fraternity, including loyalties, and people may now feel able to come forward. 'If you do have information please, now, do the right thing, 10 years on John's family must have justice and answers.' Anyone with information on Mr Palmer's murder should call Essex Police, or contact independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Leg-lengthening surgery from ‘Materialists' is real — here's why patients drop thousands on the ‘Frankenstein' procedure
Leg-lengthening surgery from ‘Materialists' is real — here's why patients drop thousands on the ‘Frankenstein' procedure

New York Post

time37 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Leg-lengthening surgery from ‘Materialists' is real — here's why patients drop thousands on the ‘Frankenstein' procedure

The lovelorn sure will go to great lengths for a date. In the new romantic drama 'Materialists' starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans, there's conversation around what constitutes a so-called perfect man to date. Johnson's matchmaker character, Lucy, describes Pascal's statuesque character, Harry, as a 'unicorn' — good-looking, rich and 6 feet tall. Advertisement At least, now he is. Later on in the movie — small spoiler alert) — Lucy discovers Harry was 5-foot-6 before he underwent leg-lengthening surgery, leaving his legs full of scars. Limb-lengthening is a procedure that gradually lengthens the bones in the arms or legs over the course of several months. Advertisement 'What's a couple inches?' Lucy says to a client, shining a light on the superficial aspect of judging a person by their height. The surgery involves breaking the femur and/or tibia, inserting rods, and turning the rods by up to 1 millimeter per day as new bone fills in the gap, according to the International Center for Limb Lengthening. The surgery can add up to six inches in height, though most patients gain two to three inches, which is the recommended lengthening. Because it's considered cosmetic surgery, it's not typically covered by health insurance, other than in rare circumstances — and it'll cost a pretty penny. Advertisement In the U.S., bilateral femoral lengthening can sometimes cost more than $120,000, while tibia and femoral lengthening combined can cost in excess of $250,000 with some providers, according to Dr. Shahab Mahboubian, D.O., MPH. Of course, it's cheaper abroad, so some American men might travel abroad to places like Turkey to get the procedure — similar to the trend of traveling for hair transplants. But is this seemingly bizarre surgery really a thing that people desire to do — and why? Advertisement In 2019, just a few hundred limb-lengthening surgeries were conducted, according to the BBC — but the painful process is gaining popularity, and so is online talk about it, mostly out of curiosity. Dr. Dror Paley, founder of the Paley Orthopedic & Spine Institute's Stature Center in West Palm Beach, Florida, told Yahoo that most of his surgeries are done to correct physical imbalances, but on average, he performs about 100 surgeries per year on patients who simply want to get taller. 'It's very odd for us to treat patients for cosmetic reasons,' Paley said. 'It took a long time to figure out what the plastic surgeons knew all along: that they were treating body image issues.' 'Short men aren't respected, even tall men sh-t on us, we struggle finding employment, and barely get promoted,' an anonymous man, who is 25 and 5-foot-6, told Bustle. But the consensus for why men go through the painful surgery echoes the reasoning Harry in 'Materialists' had — it's for women. 'It changed our lives with women completely, of course. Women just approach us and talk to us now, which never happened before,' Harry said in the movie after getting the surgery with his brother. 'I haven't struck out since. But you can also tell the difference at work, and at restaurants, and airports. You're just worth more.' Turns out, non-movie characters agree. Advertisement Dakota Johnson and Pedro Pascal in 'Materialists.' A24 via AP 'All my life I struggled with viewing myself as a small person and no matter what I did to change it I always felt the same,' Dynzell Sigers, previously told The Post, sharing that he spent $81,000 on a leg augmentation in 2023 to become 6 feet tall. 'Limb lengthening gave me the opportunity to change my life and the way I perceive life as a whole.' 'The only reason why anyone would do leg lengthening — a life-altering surgery — is for women,' another anonymous person, 17 and 5-foot-8, told Bustle. Advertisement 'The fantasy of reinvention to find love is very, very real,' Sean, 33 and 5-foot-5, told the outlet. 'It'd be a calculated Hail Mary, a last-ditch effort to get seen — literally — by a world that unfortunately says height equals desirability,' Sean said, adding that he would do the surgery if it were free, considering it's '9,000 times' his rent. However, many short kings aren't ashamed of their height and don't buy into the idea that being taller makes it easier to find love. 'I'm living proof that finding love is possible,' Mike LeGrand, a 5-foot-3 TIkTok content creator, shared with Bustle. 'You don't need to be tall. You need to be secure with who you are.' Advertisement 'If you chase validation, it won't stop with surgery — there will always be something else to fix.' However, it's not just men who undergo the 'Frankenstein' procedure to get taller and feel more appealing to love interests. Advertisement Last year, model Theresia Fischer paid more than $162,000 on leg-lengthening surgeries to become more attractive to her now ex-husband. The reality star from Hamburg, Germany, was formerly 5-foot-5 before adding 5½ inches to her height. Another downside is the recovery process and potential side effects. According to a TikTok posted by Beverly Hills-based plastic surgeon Dr. Daniel Barrett, side effects may include infection, scarring and nerve damage. The Cleveland Clinic added some risks and complications, such as bones not hardening properly or reaching the desired length, muscle damage, and stiffness in the joints or muscles. And while the initial in-hospital recovery would take about three days, full recovery from limb-lengthening surgery takes several months.

King Charles Just Put the Nail in the Coffin in His Relationship With Harry Amid Reports There's ‘No Turning Back'
King Charles Just Put the Nail in the Coffin in His Relationship With Harry Amid Reports There's ‘No Turning Back'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

King Charles Just Put the Nail in the Coffin in His Relationship With Harry Amid Reports There's ‘No Turning Back'

The relationship between King Charles and Prince Harry has been rocky for a while. That's been obvious. Prince Harry even spoke about his desire for a reconciliation during his latest BBC interview. And it's not the only relationship within the British royal family that people have been paying a lot of attention to. Prince Harry and Prince William are not getting along either, and there are always divorce rumors surrounding Prince William and Kate Middleton and Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. But during Father's Day, King Charles might have sent the strongest message about his relationship with his son, Prince Harry. The Royal Family's Instagram account celebrated the day by posting a tribute to King Charles' father, Prince Philip, and to Queen Camilla's father, Major Bruce Shand. 'To all Dads everywhere, we wish you a happy Father's Day today,' the caption read. More from StyleCaster Where Charles Stands With Harry's Kids as William Goes After Archie & Lilibet For Their Father's 'Ultimate Windsor Crime' Princess Beatrice Seemingly Snubbed by Royal Family Amid Reports William Wants Her 'Disgraced' Dad Banished Related: Did William really cheat on Kate? The account also shared a video clip of baby Charles and his father on Stories. What wasn't present? Any mention of King Charles' sons, Prince William and Prince Harry. However, considering the King celebrated on Trooping the Colour a day before with Prince William, Kate Middleton, and their three children, it truly feels like more of a slight on Prince Harry than anyone else. Neither he nor his wife, Meghan Markle, was present for Trooping the Colour, for the third year in a row. Prince William and Kate Middleton also celebrated Father's Day with their own Instagram post featuring a family photo of William with Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis. 'Happy Father's Day, Papa (before and after!) We love you! G, C & L,' the caption read. The entire family had also posted a picture the day before, for Trooping the Colour. This comes amid reports that 'there is no turning back' for the relationship. Royals expert Hilary Fordwich told Fox News in June 2025 that, while Charles is still 'tender' toward reconciling with his son, William has 'shut the door' on Harry, and wants their father to follow suit. 'King Charles remains tender towards his son but can't risk communication. Prince William now has absolutely no interest in mending fences. Those close to the king say he [shouldn't] make peace with Harry in a way that would burden Prince William's future reign. The animosity is so deep that William has shut the door on Harry. Charles is not willing to go against his heir's wishes.' Things are indeed so bad that another source told the outlet that the two might not see each other again until their father dies. 'The funeral of Charles would be the first time that courtiers would imagine [them reuniting],' the source said. 'I can't imagine William would invite Harry to his coronation.' Harry's relationship with William is broken. His relationship with his father isn't doing much better. And there was no acknowledgment of his place in the royal family during Father's Day, which one would think would be an important day for all, even if the rumors of a feud are true. All bad signs for a relationship people have been hoping can be fixed before it's too late. Best of StyleCaster The 26 Best Romantic Comedies to Watch if You Want to Know What Love Feels Like These 'Bachelor' Secrets & Rules Prove What Happens Behind the Scenes Is So Much Juicier BTS's 7 Members Were Discovered in the Most Unconventional Ways

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store