N-Dubz singer Tulisa Contostavlos is the third star to arrive at Brisbane Airport ahead of this year’s I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here.
The former X-Factor judge, 36, stepped away from the spotlight in 2013 after a series of scandals, but ten years later he went on tour with N-Dubz and is now re-entering the world of reality TV. shows with a rumored stint on ITV’s Flagship Show.
Arriving Down Under, the pop star kept a low profile among the crowd, covering her identity with a full gray tracksuit, a mask and keeping her head down as she walked.
After his 22-hour flight, he asked, ‘Is there a McDonald’s around here?’ and added: ‘You can’t go wrong with a Big Mac, can you?’
Yesterday she revealed she was going to have a “fat transfer” in the future to help reduce the bruising on her face that makes her “paranoid”.
N-Dubz singer Tulisa Contostavlos is the third star to arrive at Brisbane Airport ahead of this year’s I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here event.
The singer, 36, took to Instagram on Saturday to point out bruising on her right cheek, which she said appeared after years of taking steroid injections to control chronic cysts.
Tulisa has had a total of 10 cysts removed from the inside of her mouth in recent months, after constantly feeling like “her cheek is on fire” and suffering from the sensation of ants crawling across her face.
Rising to fame in the mid-2000s with London hip-hop group N-Dubz, made up of herself, her cousin Dappy and her best friend Fazer, Tulisa split from them in 2011.
It was then that she landed the coveted role of X-Factor judge at the age of 22 and remains the youngest judge in the show’s history.
Simon Cowell hired her to replace Cheryl Cole and Tulisa discovered Little Mix, which became one of the most successful girl groups in history.
However, her success on
A year later, she left X-Factor, telling Olivia Attwood’s podcast last month: “Coming back to X-Factor was like virtual rape.” I felt judged, upset and ashamed. I just did it like I had from the moment I walked in there, but this time I did it with my own emotions, just trying to keep my head above water.
“I was miserable at the end of the second year, I wasn’t going to do the show again and they could already see where I was going and they weren’t going to hire me again, but at that point, I.” I had already said that I can’t do this.
‘I hate him every day. I felt all these eyes on me and it reminded me of what happened. I needed time to leave and think about what happened.
After leaving X-Factor in 2013, Tulisa became embroiled in a drugs scandal when she was arrested on suspicion of supplying class A drugs.
But in fact, it was part of a sting operation by famed News of the World undercover reporter Mazher Mahmood, also known as the False Sheikh.
He claimed she had arranged a deal to sell him drugs while he posed as a wealthy film producer.
The case went to court and Mahmood was accused of tampering with evidence and the case against Tulisa collapsed.
He was later tried on related charges and sentenced to 15 months in prison, with the I Need You singer saying: “Let me be perfectly clear.”
‘I have never trafficked drugs and have never been involved in the consumption or trafficking of cocaine.
“This entire case was a horrible and disgusting setup by Mazher Mahmood.”
A year later, she found herself back in court after being accused of consecutively attacking blogger and TOWIE star Vas J Morgan at the Essex V-Festival in 2013.
The singer was found guilty of assault and ordered to pay a fine of £3,000, subsequently losing an appeal against the conviction.
But she is perhaps best known for her long-running legal battle against will.i.am and Britney Spears, whom she accused of denying her a writing credit on her 2012 hit song, Scream and Shout.
She claimed to have co-written the song for The Female Boss, but delisted it and will.i.am later used it for his collaboration with Britney. Tulisa says you can clearly hear her voice behind Britney’s.
In 2018, Tulisa won the case and was granted official credit on the album and 10 percent of the publishing rights and income.