Niall Horan is on the mend after sustaining a painful foot injury.
03.08.2020 - 00:49 / celebrityinsider.org
Niall Horan from One Direction joined a long line of celebrities and performers who united against all forms of racism following an anti-Semitic rant from a British rapper. NBC News says Horan joined people like The 1975 as well as Lily Allen to slam the rapper’s remarks.
The outlet picked up on other names from the scene as well, including Lewis Capaldi, Little Mix, and Rita Ora, in addition to several record labels who united to slam racism. They wrote an open letter on Saturday called,
.Niall Horan is on the mend after sustaining a painful foot injury.
Instagram that he will have to wear a medical boot for weeks on his left leg due to the injury, which he sustained after falling over a kerb."I was about six pints deep," he explained on Instagram Live (via The Sun). "I was chasing my cousin, missed the kerb and went over my ankle.
These past two weeks the UK has been overtaken by a glorious heatwave. Despite the horrid humidity that came with it, the majority of the population put on their best summer clothes and headed out to top up their tans.
Wiley‘s MBE is under review after he faced widespread criticism for launching a shocking anti-Semitic rant last month.The London rapper was condemned after posting a series of vitriolic messages across Instagram and Twitter, which led to his eventual suspension from the social media sites.Wiley – real name Richard Cowie – now faces the prospect of being stripped of his MBE after the Cabinet Office responded to calls from the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA).In a letter from the Cabinet
Hundreds of key players in the U.K.'s music industry, including artists, managers, producers and record labels, are co-signing an urgent call to speak out against racism and intolerance. A letter, supported by the likes of The 1975, Niall Horan, Little Mix, Nile Rodgers and Lewis Capaldi, major U.K.
Hundreds of key players in the U.K.'s music industry, including artists, managers, producers and record labels, are co-signing an urgent call to speak out against racism and intolerance.
Rapper Wiley has insisted he is not racist as he apologised for “generalising” in a series of anti-Semitic tweets.
Wiley has been permanently banned from Twitter after he launched an extensive thread of anti-Semitic messages on the social media site.The London rapper faced widespread condemnation after posting the vitriolic messages across Instagram and Twitter last weekend.Twitter announced on Saturday (July 25) that Wiley had been banned from the site for a week, but his account appears to have been permanently suspended as of this morning (July 29).When searching for his profile, users are met with a
here Using the hashtag #NoSafeSpaceForJewHate , a number of high-profile Twitter users have announced their support for a boycott of the site in protest over the company’s handling of the incident.