Celebrities: Greta Thunberg rebukes US kickboxers on Twitter. -Panorama

Greta Thunberg, 19, Swedish climate activist, isn’t as nice as he used to be. She was posted to Twitter by former US kickboxer Andrew Tate with a post addressed, which says: “Hello Greta Thunberg, I have 33 cars.” Tate lists his vehicles and ends with the words: “Please give me your email address and I can send you a complete list of my cars and their huge emission values.” Thunberg responded in turn with a tweet: “Yes, please enlighten me.” Tate should send his email to [email protected]. It is rather unlikely that this exists.

(Photo: Sonia Moskowitz/dpa)

Drew Barrymore, 47, US actress, has a ghost problem. “It’s unbelievable how painful ghosting is,” she told US magazine People about their experiences with a sudden loss of contact by the other person. “For anyone out there who has been ghosted and feels like a bushfire went through their body, I can totally understand that. It’s so weird that a human being can behave like that.” The term “ghosting” describes the phenomenon that people you are dating vanish into thin air like a ghost – all calls and messages suddenly go unanswered.

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(Photo: Chris Pizzello/dpa)

Ashanti, 42, US singer, is picky. “Believe me, there are a lot of men who want to father my baby – and they’ve tried really hard,” she told US magazine People. After completing her current projects, she wants to take a step back, get married and have children – “but I want to make sure he’s the right one,” she said. For a possible mom role, she sees her own mother as her greatest role model: “If I had even one gram of my mother’s skills, I would honestly be outstanding.”

Sean Dilley, British journalist, is blind but not defenseless. “He messed with the wrong blind man on the wrong day,” he told the BBC, for which he works as a reporter, on Tuesday. Dilley, who has been blind since he was 14, was taking a break when someone rode past and snatched his cell phone from his hand. He instinctively threw himself in the direction in which he suspected the attacker. Happy to have his phone back: “I’m tweeting about the phone he stole (and I got it back),” he wrote. Using a voice recognition program, Dilley called the police. He made the attacker, who continued to resist, promise to run away immediately – and then let him go.


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