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Posts Tagged ‘Max Markson’

Lara Bingle’s ex manager may now sign up Oz topless fire-fighting heroine

After being dumped by Aussie model Lara Bingle, celebrity agent Max Markson is set to sign up Northern Territory’s topless fire-fighting heroine Tash Bennett.
The high-profile agent is known for helping reality TV stars cash in on their fifteen minutes of fame.
He was also recently hired – and fired – but Australian cricketer Michael Clarke’’s ex-fiancee [...]

Lara Bingle to continue legal action against Brendan Fevola

Australian model Lara Bingle is continuing her legal action against AFL player Brendan Fevola.
Bingle, 22, is proceeding despite football bosses deciding on April 9 to drop their inquiry into the matter.
“The matter remains in the hands of our lawyers,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Bingle’s agent Max Markson as saying.
“Our legal action has always been against [...]

Lara Bingle fails to impress TV bosses at screen test

Lara Bingle has screen tested for a job as an entertainment reporter with Bigpond TV.
But the 22-year-old Australian, who recently split from cricketer Michael Clarke following a nude photograph scandal, reportedly failed to impress television executives with her presenting skills.
Bingle, who auditioned two weeks ago at Sydney’’s Chief Entertainment studio, was allegedly like ‘a deer [...]

Lara Bingle parts way with new manager

Australian model Lara Bingle has parted ways with her new manager after just three months.
In October she booted her management team at International Quarterback – the team that has successfully represented her partner, cricketer Michael Clarke, for six years, reports News.com.au.
She persuaded publishing executive Deb Baker to give up her job and [...]

Backpacker father: My son’s no fake

Jamie Neale ‘went to hell and back’, says Richard Cass after son’s 12 days lost in the Blue Mountains in Australia

The father of the British backpacker lost in the wilderness has denied claims that his son faked his ordeal in the Australian bush in order to make money.

Richard Cass told Australian TV that his son, Jamie Neale, was angry at suggestions that his account of being lost in the Blue Mountains for 12 days, was either embellished or completely fictitious.

“This is not a hoax,” Cass said. “My boy has been to hell and back.”

Sean Anderson, a Sydney-based agent, told the Times that he had signed Neale and his father to his agency to sell their story to the British and Australian media.

Another talent agent in Australia, Max Markson, told ABC News there that the backpacker could earn up to £49,000 for his story. “I think it’s worth A$100,000 immediately. And a lot of that money would come from the English press. There’s enormous interest in the story in England,” said Markson.

By tomorrow Neale, 19, from Muswell Hill, north London, could be discharged from the Blue Mountains hospital where he has been recovering from dehydration and exposure.

Neal arrived in Australia on 22 June, and, on 2 July, booked into a youth hostel in Katoomba, a popular destination for backpackers planning to explore the Blue Mountains in New South Wales. The following morning, dressed in a light shirt, jacket, jeans and a cap and carrying a small bag, he set off alone on a 10-mile hike. He then became disoriented and lost.

The alarm was raised after he failed to turn up for a prepaid tour of local caves the next day. A hunt involving 100 people – including police rescue teams, dog handlers, firefighters and volunteers – started that eventually cost more than A$100,000.

Superintendent Anthony McWhirter, of the Blue Mountain police, told Australia’s Channel 9 News that the force had no reason to doubt Neale’s story. “Questions are being asked, at the end of the day an incredible story is far harder to believe,” he said. “But [from] our preliminary reports and discussion with Jamie, he’s been there for 12 days.”

Cass said his son had survived after finding water and by eating seeds and “some sort of weed which was like [salad] rocket”. He was found alive but dehydrated by sightseers in the Blue Mountains national park, west of Sydney, yesterday.

A hospital spokeswoman said: “We’re taking it one day at a time. We’re waiting on test results. He is stable and resting comfortably, and has eaten well.”

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