Billie was ghosted by Bad Guy
Star had ‘final rest before collapsing of exhaustion’
BILLIE Eilish was once “ghosted” by a boy.
The Bad Guy singer has revealed the individual cut her off — as he was dating someone else.
On the podcast Miss Me?, Billie (22) told Lily Allen and Miquita Oliver: “It was literally unbelievable. To this day, [he] never texted me again.
Plan
“It was somebody that I’d also known for years and had a plan, the day of, on the phone, making a plan, this is my address, be there at 3pm — never heard from him again.”
On finding out he was with someone else, she added: “And I was like ‘oh’. But I didn’t know people still did that.”
MICHAEL Mosley may have taken a tragic final rest just yards from safety before dying of exhaustion.
Initial findings indicate the TV doctor died of natural causes on the Greek island of Symi around 4pm last Wednesday.
He had left his wife Dr Clare Bailey Mosley and their friends at Agios Nikolaos beach at around 1.30pm to go for a walk.
His body was found on Sunday on rocky ground just 260 feet from the Agia Marina resort, after a five-day search. Yesterday, friends left a single white flower at the scene.
Greek police said the coroner’s report suggested the 67-year-old was resting before collapsing on the rocks.
Slope
CCTV footage appears to show the TV doc making his way down a rocky slope close to a fence before disappearing from view.
Greek police spokeswoman Konstantia Dimoglidou said the post-mortem examination showed no injuries.
She added the position of Dr Mosley’s body indicated he died of natural causes. Further tests are to be carried out on the dad-of-four.
Tributes continued to pour in for the health guru, who appeared on popular UK TV shows including This Morning and The One Show.
Chris van Tulleken, his co-presenter on BBC series Trust Me, I’m A Doctor, said: “Broadcasting can be very competitive and a bit cut-throat. Michael set this tone where we have all become friends. On screen we’re all pals, off screen we’re all pals.”
Fellow co-star Dr Saleyha Ahsan said she would remember Mosley as “a mentor and a friend” who “did incredible things for medicine, and for public health”.
Dr Ahsan told BBC Breakfast: “The way that I got to know him on screen, that really personable accessible character that he comes across on television, that’s exactly how he was in real life and how he was with me.
Ease
“He instantly put me at ease, settled me down, and we got on with the job. And I forgot about the cameras and the lights, we just had a really good conversation.
“He just had this ability to break down the complex and make it accessible to all. And I think the other thing that I’ve been thinking about is trust, he had this ability to make us trust him.
“He did incredible things for medicine, and for public health, in a way that I think few others have.”