Victoria Beckham has been banned from talking diets with Katie Holmes.Tom Cruise has welcomed the recommencement of Victoria Beckham and Katie Holmes’ friendship, but only if the ‘d’ word is banned.

Yep, that’s right. Posh Spice and the better half of TomKat are forbidden to discuss diets, in case Katie ends up becoming as thin as Victoria.

TomKat are hoping to start babymaking in the near future, just like the Beckhams, and Tom is worried that Katie will become too obsessed with her diet and fitness regimes.

Victoria Beckham is preparing herself for her fourth Posh pregnancy.Victoria Beckham, who is quite possibly the skinniest mother in the world, has adapted her usual diet in order to get her ovaries ripe for baby-making.

Posh Spice, 34, and husband David Beckham, 33, have been dropping hints about their baby plans in the last few months, particularly as Posh wants to add a girl to the boy-dominated Beckham clan.

Posh said she wanted to get pregnant after the Spice Girls’ world tour had ended in February, and rumours became rife after she was seen without alcohol at her recent birthday bash. She is also said to have made a bet with her gynaecologist, Dr. Malcolm Gillard, that she would have a fourth child by the time he retired in 2009. Interesting, ey?

http://www.dietpixie.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/mel_b.jpgHave you ever wondered how Mel B got those rock hard abs, or how Victoria Beckham stays so slim without setting foot in a gym?

Not content with sparring over each other’s husbands, or competing to win the ‘fastest post-baby weightloss’ race, Spice Girls Victoria Beckham and Mel B have both been extolling the virtues of shagging.

Victoria Beckham and a big fish finger

January 23rd, 2008 23:29

fish fingerThe world’s largest sustainable cod fish finger was ‘unveiled’ on Tuesday, 22 January as news that Vicky B is fish-finger obsessed reaches DP Towers.

Apparently, known wit David Beckham calls his wife ‘Nemo’, thanks to her fervent finger fetish. At 56 calories a ‘finger’, they’re surprisingly diet-friendly.

Valium officially the new heroin, sort of

valium on the increaseValium is not just for depressed housewives with bad hair and pearl necklaces.

In fact, the drug which helped tranquilised an entire nation of bored women during the 60s and 70s is making a comeback - as a cheap alternative to heroin.

According to DrugScope, there has been an increase in people using the pill known as ‘Mother’s Little Helper’ in 15 of the 20 UK towns surveyed.

So what is behind the increase? Well, in its heyday, Valium - or diazepam to give it its correct non trademark name - was prescribed by loads of GPs desperate to get moaning mothers out of their waiting rooms.

It’s still prescribed today, but mainly for help in helping people deal with giving up harder drugs or alchohol.

And it’s this that is boosting trade. At £1 a pill it’s certainly a cheaper alternative to crack and heroin and it seems the UK cannot get enough of the stuff.

That’s led to a surge of illegal drugs pouring into Britain from other European countries.

In fact, according to DrugScope, police and customs seizures of diazepam has risen from 300,000 to two million in just two years.

DrugScope’s chief executive Martin Barnes said: “The rise in the use of illicitly imported diazepam is concerning, particularly as drug users face a high risk of overdose when using the drug in combination with other drugs such as methadone and alcohol.”

Valium officially the new heroin, sort of

valium on the increaseValium is not just for depressed housewives with bad hair and pearl necklaces.

In fact, the drug which helped tranquilised an entire nation of bored women during the 60s and 70s is making a comeback - as a cheap alternative to heroin.

According to DrugScope, there has been an increase in people using the pill known as ‘Mother’s Little Helper’ in 15 of the 20 UK towns surveyed.

So what is behind the increase? Well, in its heyday, Valium - or diazepam to give it its correct non trademark name - was prescribed by loads of GPs desperate to get moaning mothers out of their waiting rooms.

It’s still prescribed today, but mainly for help in helping people deal with giving up harder drugs or alchohol.

And it’s this that is boosting trade. At £1 a pill it’s certainly a cheaper alternative to crack and heroin and it seems the UK cannot get enough of the stuff.

That’s led to a surge of illegal drugs pouring into Britain from other European countries.

In fact, according to DrugScope, police and customs seizures of diazepam has risen from 300,000 to two million in just two years.

DrugScope’s chief executive Martin Barnes said: “The rise in the use of illicitly imported diazepam is concerning, particularly as drug users face a high risk of overdose when using the drug in combination with other drugs such as methadone and alcohol.”

Valium officially the new heroin, sort of

valium on the increaseValium is not just for depressed housewives with bad hair and pearl necklaces.

In fact, the drug which helped tranquilised an entire nation of bored women during the 60s and 70s is making a comeback - as a cheap alternative to heroin.

According to DrugScope, there has been an increase in people using the pill known as ‘Mother’s Little Helper’ in 15 of the 20 UK towns surveyed.

So what is behind the increase? Well, in its heyday, Valium - or diazepam to give it its correct non trademark name - was prescribed by loads of GPs desperate to get moaning mothers out of their waiting rooms.

It’s still prescribed today, but mainly for help in helping people deal with giving up harder drugs or alchohol.

And it’s this that is boosting trade. At £1 a pill it’s certainly a cheaper alternative to crack and heroin and it seems the UK cannot get enough of the stuff.

That’s led to a surge of illegal drugs pouring into Britain from other European countries.

In fact, according to DrugScope, police and customs seizures of diazepam has risen from 300,000 to two million in just two years.

DrugScope’s chief executive Martin Barnes said: “The rise in the use of illicitly imported diazepam is concerning, particularly as drug users face a high risk of overdose when using the drug in combination with other drugs such as methadone and alcohol.”