Radio star Amanda Holden revealed she’s in big trouble with her daughter after the schoolgirl forgot her netball kit – and she put out an appeal on national radio to rectify the situation
Amanda Holden has admitted she is in ‘so much trouble’ with her teenage daughter Hollie as she issued a desperate plea on her radio show to try and escape the dog house.
The celebrity told her Heart Breakfast radio show that she’s in trouble with her 12 year old daughter after making a blunder with the school calendar and forgetting to pack her netball kit.
Amanda, 53, told fellow host JK: “I told my daughter HollIe that was no netball club after school today because it’s not on the school timetable. But it’s try it week, so it is on.
“She’s been doing netball forever. Anyway, do you know she literally just put the phone down on me in the car. I can’t believe the attitude.”
JK then added: “Do you know what I’m afraid of? For my son, it’s coming. And my daughter it’s definitely coming. You literally got the phone put down on you?”
The TV star then took drastic action to get back into her daughter’s good books, putting out a nationwide appeal to ensure Hollie could still play her favourite sport.
Amanda said: “I literally got the phone put down on me. So if any of my school friend mums are listening, can you please take a spare kit in for Hollie because she won’t forgive me. And Hollie stop ringing me, I’m on air!”
Her pal JK then added: “Even though we’re doing this show, life continues. I just got a reminder for Luna’s PE kit.” Amanda agreed: “Oh my God, the irony. I’m across everything else she’s doing, I bet she’s forgotten her violin today.”
It came after Amanda skipped the National Television Awards as she said the trip to the O2 Arena in Greenwich was a bit of a trek. The blonde bombshell has been a regular attendee at the event in years gone by she decided to give this one a miss.
She told her radio show she’d had “a much nicer evening” at home instead of attending the ceremony. She gave the commute as her reason for not going, saying: “It’s a schlep, it’s down at the O2, it’s just so difficult to get to.”