Princess Diana 'had terrible hair'

PRINCESS Diana’s hair looked really weird, it has been claimed.

As the Diana biopic prepares to open in the UK, former bodyguard Tom Logan broke the unofficial code of pretending to like Diana’s coiffure.

Logan said: “Diana was frequently described as the most beautiful woman in the world. But let’s be honest, her hair was really letting her down.

“When she first married Charles she was rocking this ‘demure air hostess’ cut that kind of worked.

“But after that it was a collection of monstrosities ranging from ‘quasi-lesbian police superintendent’, and ‘glam supply teacher’ to ‘Ailsa from Home & Away‘.

“The problem is that she was surrounded by sycophants. Finally she asked me, ‘Tom, what do you think of my hair?’

“I replied that it looked a bit like a massive Shredded Wheat.

“The following morning there was a knock at the door. It was a butler carrying a satin cushion with my P45 on it.”

He added: “By comparison, Princess Anne has never been a looker but at the same time she’s kept her hair simple and it works.

“Diana could have learned from that. But now, sadly, it’s too late.”

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Office 'best wishes' card signed by five million people

POLICE are trying to trace the recipient of a card signed by an estimated 5,000,000 workers across the UK.

The card has been passed from desk to desk for the last six months and disinterestedly scrawled with a non-specific message by 0.8 per cent of the British population.

The name of the recipient, along with any clues about the life event it relates to, has been completely obliterated under thousands of layers of blue and black ink.

Investigating officer DI Carolyn Ryan said: “Spectrographic analysis shows 1.5 million people wrote ‘Best wishes’, 2.2 million wrote ‘Good luck’ and 0.4 million wrote ‘Don’t get too drunk’.

“204,000 cheeky subversives, probably agency workers or people about to leave for university, drew ejaculating penises on it.

“The card features highly generic design and text, probably it was purchased by a low-ranking administrative worker who did not even know the recipient.

“It could be for a birthday, new job, new baby, marriage, promotion or even elective surgery.”

Police admit they are struggling with leads as none of the witnesses pays even the slightest attention to the many cards that cross their desks every single day.

DI Ryan continued: “We can’t analyse the card any further because one of the forensics team left it on their desk, it got passed around and signed and then went to the lads in traffic, and God knows where it went from there.

“But we remain anxious to trace the intended recipient of the card, whoever they are, to give them the card and an associated brown A4 envelope containing £640,000 in loose change.”