Former Love Island UK host Laura Whitmore is trying again on her friendship with Caroline Flack with fondness.
On Friday, February 14, Whitmore wrote a prolonged submit via Instagram that featured photographs of herself and Flack, who died in February 2020 at age 40. Her submit additionally included screenshots of textual content messages shared between the 2 ladies.
“I acquired a brand new cellphone this month,” Whitmore, 39, wrote, explaining that as she tried to obtain WhatsApp messages from her iCloud, quite a lot of older messages popped up as an alternative.
Whitmore shared that the messages between herself and Flack “present a facet to Caroline which is good to recollect.”
“She wasn’t good and I didn’t know her in addition to others however I knew she had her demons,” the Love Island UK host continued. “I met Caroline in 2011 after I took over from her internet hosting I’m a star get me out of right here now. She was as supportive of me doing that position again then as she was when she supported me doing Love Island in 2020.”
Flack started internet hosting Love Island on ITV2 in 2015. “Each have been nice exhibits,” Whitmore added, “with tons of of individuals engaged on them and counting on the present going forward. I’ll all the time be so grateful of the final messages between me and Caroline.”
Whitmore wrote she “by no means requested [Flack] in regards to the courtroom case — it wasn’t my enterprise,” noting, “I didn’t know her associate on the time and I nonetheless don’t. Each time I’ve been requested to talk about the state of affairs or be a part of a documentary I decline.”
Flack was found dead in her East London house on February 15, 2020, and it was later confirmed she had died by suicide. Within the weeks main as much as her demise, Flack had allegedly been concerned in a bodily altercation together with her boyfriend Lewis Burton and authorities have been transferring ahead with an assault cost, per The Guardian.
Flack’s household shared an unpublished Instagram message from the previous host the day she was discovered useless. Within the message, which was printed by the New York Times, Flack “took duty for what occurred” the evening she was arrested and insisted she “was NOT a home abuser.”
“I’ve already mentioned all I can say on the tragedy and don’t need phrases to be misconstrued and have to take care of my very own psychological well being. This was the final correspondence I ever had together with her. I actually did hope she was someplace pretty,” Whitmore’s Friday caption continued. “I by no means knew the extent of her struggles or what was to come back. The final message from her to me have been love hearts. I’d prefer to suppose wherever she is now, she’s at peace and someplace pretty like I hoped.”
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