SEBASTIAN SHAKESPEARE: Jaggers' birthday game of snap...

Jade Jagger, daughter of Rolling Stone Sir Mick, revealed this summer that her one-year-old son Ray, with her art director husband Adrian Fillary, was already ‘crawling around everywhere, on top of everything, and keeping us busy’.

Luckily the tiny tot sat still long enough to admire his birthday cake alongside his 43-year-old mother, who also has two older children, Assisi, 22, and Amber, 18, by her artist ex, Piers Jackson.

Jade Jagger posted this picture of her son Ray, one, admiring his birthday cake on Instagram yesterday

Jade Jagger posted this picture of her son Ray, one, admiring his birthday cake on Instagram yesterday

She uploaded the image alongside a snap of herself as a toddler being spoonfed by her father (above)

She uploaded the image alongside a snap of herself as a toddler being spoonfed by her father (above)

Jade posted the picture yesterday alongside a snap of herself as a toddler being spoonfed by her father. 

Birthdays must be a hoot in the Jagger household.

Jade is also a first-time grandmother after Assisi gave birth to her own daughter Ezra last year.

 

More digs at pushy Pesto

Respected BBC deputy political editor James Landale broke the biggest scoop of the General Election campaign when David Cameron told him he would not seek a third term.

However, Landale was then overlooked for promotion when Corporation bosses chose Laura Kuenssberg to succeed political editor Nick Robinson earlier this year.

To add insult to injury, he was then beaten to the politics supremo role at ITV by pushy Robert Peston. 

This week, James Landale wrote a message to fellow political correspondents. 'I tweet tonight in praise of quiet competence and putting the story first,’ he said, pointedly. ‘KBO.’ The initials stand for Keep B***ering On

This week, James Landale wrote a message to fellow political correspondents. 'I tweet tonight in praise of quiet competence and putting the story first,’ he said, pointedly. ‘KBO.’ The initials stand for Keep B***ering On

This week Landale finally vented his frustration online, in a message to fellow political correspondents.

‘I tweet tonight in praise of quiet competence and putting the story first,’ he said, pointedly. ‘KBO.’ The initials stand for Keep B***ering On.

Kuenssberg is alleged to have tried to poach Landale’s Cameron scoop before he broke the story himself after she found it on the BBC’s internal system, and had to be warned off by her boss. 

The BBC denies the claim.

 
J. K. Rowling (pictured) accidentally named a hapless Brazilian man in a tweet to her 5.68 million followers yesterday, so making him the recipient of a deluge of questions from Harry Potter fans

J. K. Rowling (pictured) accidentally named a hapless Brazilian man in a tweet to her 5.68 million followers yesterday, so making him the recipient of a deluge of questions from Harry Potter fans

J. K. Rowling could have done with her very own magic wand yesterday to undo an embarrassing online blunder.

The author accidentally named a hapless Brazilian man in a tweet to her 5.68 million followers, so making him the recipient of a deluge of questions from Harry Potter fans.

Rowling, who also writes as Robert Galbraith, said: ‘I’ll be talking about my new novel Career Of Evil. It is also @RobertGalbraith’s new novel.’

But she failed to remember the name of her alter ego’s Twitter handle, and had to swiftly add: ‘Apologies @RobertGalbraith, whom I tagged instead of @RGalbraith!

‘Please stop asking him when Sirius Black’s birthday is.

‘He doesn’t know!’

The inexplicable allure of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn continues. 

British model Edie Campbell, who was recently dating Bryan Ferry’s saturnine son Otis, gushes: ‘I really like how he looks like he’s been on a sleeper train to London, then gotten off all crumpled and slightly unshaven.’

What happens to the Royal Box at the Albert Hall when the Her Majesty is not using it for her own entertainment?

According to a new book on the monarchy, Royalty Inc by Stephen Bates, the Queen allows Palace staff to let their hair down in some of her 20 seats.

Keeper of the Privy Purse, Sir Alan Reid, pointed out to his boss that a rule requiring staff to dress smartly in suits and ties was hardly necessary for a pop concert.

Reid told Bates: ‘She said to me: “I wondered when you were going to get round to changing that silly rule.” So we did.’

 

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