The lottery winner and the gardener:
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Except that she hasn't. And Gillian Bayford is not Lady Chatterley, however much the Mail wants to bring that fictional liaison with the gamekeeper to mind.
The story of the EuroMillions winners divorcing was the splash in yesterday's Sun, so the Mail must have felt the need to come up with a new line. Instead it went chasing after an old one. The Sun's report said: |
Earlier this year wild rumours surfaced of a fling between Gillian and the couple's gardener Christopher Tovey. But rubbishing the claims, Gillian insisted in July: 'We are not splitting up. We aren't any different to the way we were before.'
Ah, so she was wrong about the split, it goes without saying that she must have been lying about the affair. Get on the case lads.
The intro on the page 5 lead is fairly straightforward: the couple have blamed the stress of becoming multimillionaires overnight for their decision to split. For some reason the word 'stress' is in quotes, as though the paper is questioning the notion that there could be any stress involved in being rich. Or that the money is a convenient explanation that the paper doesn't believe.
From then on, the tone is sneering:
The intro on the page 5 lead is fairly straightforward: the couple have blamed the stress of becoming multimillionaires overnight for their decision to split. For some reason the word 'stress' is in quotes, as though the paper is questioning the notion that there could be any stress involved in being rich. Or that the money is a convenient explanation that the paper doesn't believe.
From then on, the tone is sneering:
But while Adrian and Gillian Bayford claim the huge sum led to the split, there's also the small matter of a rumoured affair between Mrs Bayford and the couple's gardener - and allegations that Mr Bayford ran over his alleged love rival with a golf buggy.
Unnamed friends tell the three (male) reporters put to work on the story that Mrs Bayford revelled in the luxury lifestyle afforded by their EuroMillions win, but her husband struggled to enjoy the high life and had not settled on their country estate. He had left the £6m Georgian mansion and now lived in a more modest £500,000 four-bedroom home.
Both properties are pictured with 'his' and 'hers' red and white captions - just as they were in the Sun 24 hours earlier.
Mr Bayford told the reporters that the stress of managing the fortune meant they had not spent time together - and their Grade II Cambridgeshire pile became a chore to maintain, he claimed.
Both properties are pictured with 'his' and 'hers' red and white captions - just as they were in the Sun 24 hours earlier.
Mr Bayford told the reporters that the stress of managing the fortune meant they had not spent time together - and their Grade II Cambridgeshire pile became a chore to maintain, he claimed.
When you win the lottery it's so stressful,' he said. 'I've worked so hard on those grounds [at the mansion], I've not had a break, we've never had time together as a couple.
Don't you love the 'at the mansion' in square brackets, just in case the point hadn't been hammered home hard enough?
Further down, friends (the same friends, different friends?) say that Mr Bayford was a non-driver and could not enjoy the couple's new fleet of cars or their golf buggy, which they say he crashed while trying to navigate his grounds.
But Mrs Bayford revelled in the luxury lifestyle afforded by their win (again) - she has had a makeover and slimmed down, and enjoys their fleet of cars (again), which includes an Audi, a Mercedes and a sporty Mini.
However, a former friend said the win had 'changed her' and that she had lost touch with many of her old acquaintances. This friend, a former business partner who is named, says 'I've deleted her numbers from my phone.'
Well, that says it all, doesn't it? Mrs B is clearly a social pariah.
Meanwhile, more unnamed friends say that Mr Bayford preferred a more humble lifestyle to his wife, a view apparently justified by his former business partner Richard Hudspith's comment: 'Adrian didn't want to do anything special after winning all that money.'
Further down, friends (the same friends, different friends?) say that Mr Bayford was a non-driver and could not enjoy the couple's new fleet of cars or their golf buggy, which they say he crashed while trying to navigate his grounds.
But Mrs Bayford revelled in the luxury lifestyle afforded by their win (again) - she has had a makeover and slimmed down, and enjoys their fleet of cars (again), which includes an Audi, a Mercedes and a sporty Mini.
However, a former friend said the win had 'changed her' and that she had lost touch with many of her old acquaintances. This friend, a former business partner who is named, says 'I've deleted her numbers from my phone.'
Well, that says it all, doesn't it? Mrs B is clearly a social pariah.
Meanwhile, more unnamed friends say that Mr Bayford preferred a more humble lifestyle to his wife, a view apparently justified by his former business partner Richard Hudspith's comment: 'Adrian didn't want to do anything special after winning all that money.'
On the website, the Mail has more space to run pictures of Mr Bayford's new home, including one of an indoor swimming pool and another of a grand piano in a conservatory. They aren't hard to come by once you know which agent marketed the property. A little internet research throws up further photographs showing that the piano makes little impact on the conservatory, which also houses a refectory style dining table with seating for ten, and that the various sitting rooms include a rather nice library. The agent's advertisement also tells us that the house was for sale for 'offers over £600,000' and that it has five bedrooms not four.
None of this is to begrudge Mr Bayford his new home - it certainly is modest for a man with his sort of capital in the bank - but the whole tenor of the Mail's story is to depict a down-to-earth man licking his wounds while his vain, above-her-station unfaithful wife swans round like the lady of the manor.The most interesting thing is that while the front and inside headlines both make big play of the 'affair with the gardener', everyone in the story says there was no such relationship.
None of this is to begrudge Mr Bayford his new home - it certainly is modest for a man with his sort of capital in the bank - but the whole tenor of the Mail's story is to depict a down-to-earth man licking his wounds while his vain, above-her-station unfaithful wife swans round like the lady of the manor.The most interesting thing is that while the front and inside headlines both make big play of the 'affair with the gardener', everyone in the story says there was no such relationship.
Mr Bayford told the Mail last night: 'Gillian and I have split.' He denied that there was anyone else involved, saying 'There's never been anything like that at all.'
Friends last night dismissed the rumours over an affair between Mrs Bayford and Mr Tovey, 40, as nonsense.
Mr Tovey, who lives with his wife in a small terraced house in Haverhill, told the Mail last night: 'I've got a lot at stake and I'm not willing to comment. They've separated, which is news to me, and I played no part in their separation.His wife Teri added: 'He was nothing to do with their marriage.'
Of course it is of no concern of anyone other than the Bayfords and the Toveys whether there was an affair or not. There is no way in the world a public interest defence could be offered to justify this story. Especially since the Bayfords have two young children whose lives will have been turned upside down by the lottery win and further upset by their parents' separation.
There is, however, a public interest in the fact of the split because it is important for us to see how huge wins such as theirs affect people. The comment thread on the Mail site reflects this - if you can disregard the 'all women are gold-digging hyenas' and the offensive remarks about the couple's physical appearance.
Most readers are sympathetic and wish the Bayfords well; some note that people often find they have nothing in common when they are suddenly able to spend more time together. Others point to the freedom that money gives to couples who stay together because they cannot afford to part.
There is no reason to disbelieve Mr Bayford's analysis that managing the money was too stressful. He closed his music shop four months after the lottery win because he couldn't cope with the constant begging. His wife started a children's play centre (with the former friend who has deleted her numbers), but swiftly abandoned it because she said she did not have enough time to devote to it.
Managing money is stressful, whether you have too much or too little. The family bought a big house - as most of us would do if we had their fortune - and then discovered that it didn't run itself. We know they had help in the garden, but none of the anonymous friends mentioned anyone else working at the property. It is perfectly feasible that it was all too much and that it drove the couple apart.
But the Mail didn't see it like that. The Mail didn't want to see it like that. It wanted to paint Mrs Bayford as the villain of the piece, even when her husband refused to do so. It littered the story with verbs such as 'denied' and 'claimed' to show where it stood, along with snide remarks about Mrs Bayford 'slimming down' and 'having a makeover'. As though it's the height of indulgence for a woman to spend a bit of time in the beauty parlour if she can afford it.
And what does Mrs Bayford have to say about all this? Well, the Sun reported yesterday that she had issued a statement through a spokesman, who said
There is, however, a public interest in the fact of the split because it is important for us to see how huge wins such as theirs affect people. The comment thread on the Mail site reflects this - if you can disregard the 'all women are gold-digging hyenas' and the offensive remarks about the couple's physical appearance.
Most readers are sympathetic and wish the Bayfords well; some note that people often find they have nothing in common when they are suddenly able to spend more time together. Others point to the freedom that money gives to couples who stay together because they cannot afford to part.
There is no reason to disbelieve Mr Bayford's analysis that managing the money was too stressful. He closed his music shop four months after the lottery win because he couldn't cope with the constant begging. His wife started a children's play centre (with the former friend who has deleted her numbers), but swiftly abandoned it because she said she did not have enough time to devote to it.
Managing money is stressful, whether you have too much or too little. The family bought a big house - as most of us would do if we had their fortune - and then discovered that it didn't run itself. We know they had help in the garden, but none of the anonymous friends mentioned anyone else working at the property. It is perfectly feasible that it was all too much and that it drove the couple apart.
But the Mail didn't see it like that. The Mail didn't want to see it like that. It wanted to paint Mrs Bayford as the villain of the piece, even when her husband refused to do so. It littered the story with verbs such as 'denied' and 'claimed' to show where it stood, along with snide remarks about Mrs Bayford 'slimming down' and 'having a makeover'. As though it's the height of indulgence for a woman to spend a bit of time in the beauty parlour if she can afford it.
And what does Mrs Bayford have to say about all this? Well, the Sun reported yesterday that she had issued a statement through a spokesman, who said
'Gillian Bayford confirms that her marriage to Adrian has broken down irretrievably and they have separated. Gillian will be giving no further comment about this matter either now or in the future.'
Sadly, the Mail couldn't find room for those few words.
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