Robbie Williams Brit Awards Britain Los Angeles county Williams model Williams Robbie Williams Brit Awards Britain Los Angeles county Williams

Robbie Williams accuses Liam and Noel Gallagher of bullying him out of Britain

Reading now: 879
www.mirror.co.uk

Robbie Williams has accused rock rivals Noel and Liam Gallagher of bullying him out of Britain. The singer had a long-running feud with the Oasis brothers in the 1990s and 2000s.

They traded insults and Robbie famously challenged Liam to a £100,000 bet to have a boxing match at the 2000 Brit Awards. Former Take That star Robbie, now 47, gave as good as he got in the feud.

But he says constant jibes, echoed by most of the rock establishment and sections of the media, were “unbearable”. It left him depressed and eventually inspired his move to Los Angeles in 2004.

Robbie said: “My brand of entertainment wasn’t deemed worthy because of how I presented myself. “There was a culture of ‘Robbie Williams is not cool’.

Read more on mirror.co.uk
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

09.02 / 16:25
lgbt lgbtq London The UK’s first national LGBTQ museum will open in 2022
LGBTQ+ museum is due to open in London in spring 2022.The museum, created by the charity Queer Britain, will be located in Kings Cross in north London, in part of a building owned by Art Fund, the national charity for art.It will be a ‘fully inclusive space that celebrates the stories, people and places that are so intrinsic to the queer community in the UK’, the charity declared.Queer Britain, established in 2018, plans for the museum to allow visitors to explore and learn about the past, present and future stories of the LGBTQ+ community.The director and co-founder of Queer Britain, Joseph Galliano, said: ‘It’s time the UK had an LGBTQ+ museum for all, and we are delighted to have found our first home in beautiful Granary Square, with Art Fund as our first landlord.‘It’s a prime location accessible to swathes of the country, and in a part of town with a rich queer heritage.’The new museum will include four galleries, a workshop, an education space, a gift shop, and offices for the Queer Britain team.The space will be fully accessible with lifts and ramps and will be free to enter, with donations welcome to support its work.Queer Britain’s archive is currently housed at the Bishopsgate Institute and is accessible by appointment to the public and researchers.A trustee of Queer Britain, Lisa Power, shared: ‘I’m really excited that Queer Britain is finally going to have a space to show what we can do and that we’re here for all the community, from old lesbian feminist warhorses like me to young queer folk of all genders and ethnicities.‘Queer Britain aims to tell our many and diverse histories, and now we have a home to do that from.’The director of Art Fund, Jenny Waldman, said the charity was ‘delighted’ to welcome Queer
DMCA