Amanda Holden has been making us all envious with her beautiful vacation photos, but Andrew Tate made the controversial decision to voice his feelings about her most recent bikini photo.
The 52-year-old woman shared an exquisite photo of herself in a black bikini, gazing back at the camera as she had a cool outdoor shower.
She has been posting several photos of herself in a bikini during her vacation, wow followers with her easy elegance, flawless tan, and toned body.
In addition to matching with her daughter Hollie, 11, as they donned all-pink ensembles for the UK Barbie debut, the Britain’s Got Talent judge has been rocking some serious looks lately.
Amanda admitted recently that having her youngest daughter leave primary school had left her feeling “a bit unhappy.” Amanda and her husband Chris Hughes have two children, Hollie and Alexa, both of whom are 17.
Tate used Amanda’s lovely vacation photo as a chance to grab attention by calling her out for wearing a bikini online.
Replying directly to Amanda’s tweet, the former kickboxer and content creator wrote: ‘You are a wife and a mother and you’re far past a teenager. There is no need for this post.’
Along with his brother, Tate has been accused with rape and human trafficking in Romania. Since his arrest in December, Tate has been in and out of house arrest.
The 36-year-old, his 34-year-old brother, his two Romanian friends, and each of them have denied any wrongdoing.
The indictment includes allegations of creating an organised crime organisation, according to the Directorate for the Investigation of Organised Crime and Terrorism, which stated this in June.
The indictment, filed with the Bucharest court, says the four defendants ‘organised a criminal group with a view to committing the crime of human trafficking on the territory of Romania, but also in other countries, such as the United States of America and Great Britain.’
Seven alleged victims are named, with each saying the brothers ‘misled’ them and once they arrived in Ilfov, the county surrounding Bucharest, they were ‘sexually exploited’.
He gained notoriety by boasting about his fortune to his primarily young male fans, promoting sexist ideologies, and lamenting the plight of males as victims of feminism.
Tate has argued that women “belong” to males, that they are “barely sentient,” and that women who are raped are somewhat to blame for the crimes, among other destructive statements.
Tate was specifically referenced in the House of Lords in relation to the Online Safety Bill, when he criticised tech companies for exposing impressionable young males to this kind of information.
‘A regulated company has a duty to design its service in a manner that does not harm children,’ said Baroness Kidron, who backed the amendments.
‘They [algorithms] deliberately push 13-year-old boys towards Andrew Tate—not for any content reason, but simply on the basis that 13-year-old boys are like each other and one of them has already been on that site.’
She added: ‘To push hundreds of thousands of children towards Andrew Tate for no other reason than you benefit commercially from the network effect is a travesty for children and it undermines parents.’