Sunday Express

Millions to keep up with Kimye heartache

- By James Desborough

REALITYTV queen Kim Kardashian and Kanyewest’s divorce drama will be seen by millions of viewers.

Kim allowed cameras to follow her emotional attempts to save their crumbling six-year relationsh­ip over the past nine months – but Kanye will not appear in many Keeping Upwiththe Kardashian­s scenes.

Supportive Kim, 40, her family and producers were concerned about the rapper’s mental wellbeing as he dealt with bi-polar issues and marital problems.

The couple – often referred to as Kimye – tried therapy sessions, and Kim trekked to Kanye’swyoming ranch, where he retreated as relations broke down.

On Friday, Kim filed for divorce from rapper Kanye, 43. Several sources insisted he would agree to joint custody of their four children – daughters North, 7 and Chicago, 2, and sons Saint, 5, and Psalm, 19 months.

A Los Angeles production source confirmed: “Everything in her life has been documented on camera and this is no different, except great lengths will be made to protect Kanye. It will be a very emotional series, with the focus being on Kim’s journey from being married to laying out her future as a co-parent.”

STAR dog trainer Graeme Hall is urging new owners to stick with lockdown pups through the difficult “adolescent” years.

Thousands of new dogs have been bought during lockdown, many of which have had to be rehomed when owners did not know how to cope with their erratic behaviours.

Graeme said: “The inference is that people went off glibly and got a puppy. But by and large people got through the initial lockdown puppy problems.

“Not many were getting rehomed at that point, but when the puppies got to five or six months we started to hear that the shelters were full.

“I’ve come across research at Newcastle University which talks about ‘teenage dogs’ – when puppies start to go through adolescenc­e.

“Up until one-year-old they act like human teenagers. It’s like ‘Kevin The Dog’ from Harry

‘I’ve seen people say this dog needs more than I can give...

but if they hang on it will be OK, really’

Enfield. If they speak, they’d be going, ‘Make meee!’ all the time.

“They act as though everything has gone horribly wrong.

“What happens when you’re inexperien­ced – and this is what happened last year – [new owners] go, ‘I’ve got a bad one, and it’s not for me’ and they rehome.

“I’ve seen reasonable people saying, ‘This dog needs more than I can give’. But if they hang on through that period it will be OK really.”

He also warned the nation’s pet owners to be alert to criminal gangs during lockdown.

The TV “dogfather” has been busy teaching new tricks to dogs old and young during lockdown in his popular show Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly.

But he also warned owners that puppies are at a premium because of the lockdown and thieves are resorting to some extraordin­ary tactics.

Graeme, 56, said gangs would even befriend dog walkers to find out about their pets before stealing them for breeding.

He said: “As the popularity of dogs has gone up, so has the price of puppies gone up, and people have ended up selling puppies to all the wrong people. Some were sold for thousands.

“Organised gangs have driven some of this. You’d think they would nick a dog and sell it for a quick profit, but what they’re actually doing is chatting to people walking dogs and getting their dog’s background.

“They would find out if a female dog had been neutered or not. They would then steal the dog and take it off for breeding. It’s a deplorable state of affairs.”

Graeme’s Channel 5 show is now in its third season. Its success has now spawned a book and a podcast.

In each episode Hall visits three dog-owning households from around the country, spending a few hours, or as long as is takes, to put each pooch right. He rarely fails. He told

how he arrived at dog training via an unlikely route.

He said: “I left uni in the late 80s with a degree in Spanish. It’s almost relevant because I am communicat­ing with someone who speaks a different language.

“I then worked for Weetabix for 21 years – so I made your breakfast for two decades – managing the factories.

“I was considerin­g being a management consultant but got diverted when I had to train my two pet Rottweiler­s. They were very much seen as the devil breed and I didn’t want them to cause trouble in the village.

“These two, I thought, have got to be perfect so I threw myself into dog training, and discovered I had a thing for it.”

But Graeme doesn’t bark on about his success.

He said he is just trying to educate and entertain an evergrowin­g dog-owning nation.

He explained: “Fans stop me in the street and say they find it an entertaini­ng show, but it’s got emotion in it too.

“There’s a range of feelings on show, from happy to sad, and grief as well. It gets to me too, you know. You can see in my face. But I try to make it as informativ­e as possible.

“Helping people is what has driven me right from the start, but you can only fix the dogs through the people.”

And the best new dog for a lockdown purchase?

He said: “You need to find a dog that matches your energy level. If you’re a very active person, you could go for a Border Collie.

“But if you’re slowing down and entering retirement, that dog would drive your crazy.

“If you really push me and say one breed, all I would say is if you watch Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly, keep an eye on how many Labradors there are. Not many.”

Hall is noted for his smart dressing, but his outfits have one

‘It’s that calm

assertive presence that does it. It gives off a reassuring message, it

rubs off’

thing in common: cravats. “It’s probably a mark of how sad I am,” he said, “but I have 27 cravats. A video editor once asked to re-record a piece wearing my burgundy cravat. ‘I’ve got seven of them’ I told him.

“I do also have to remember which one I’ve worn with which dog, especially if I’m returning there.

“I once bought a job lot [of cravats] on an auction site. I got a bag of five cravats for £8.50.

“But I have been known to pay full price for them too from a gentleman’s outfitters.”

At 6ft 2in he can tower over his badly behaved dogs, but that is only part of it, he said.

“It’s that calm assertive presence that does it. It gives off a reassuring message. It rubs off.

“If you look the part, you’re more than half-way there with dogs.”

Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly, Tuesdays, 8pm, Channel 5; Talking Dogs with Graeme Hall is available on all major podcast platforms

 ??  ?? MARITAL DRAMA : Kim’s TV show will feature her break-up with Kanye, left
MARITAL DRAMA : Kim’s TV show will feature her break-up with Kanye, left
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 ?? Picture: EMILY BARKER/AVALON Factual Ltd ?? DOG DAYS: Graeme in an episode from his show, trying to train an Afghan Hound that had pulled its owner over and left her with a broken leg
PATIENCE: Graeme with various dogs from his show, which he says can behave in ways which remind him of Harry Enfield’s teen Kevin
Picture: EMILY BARKER/AVALON Factual Ltd DOG DAYS: Graeme in an episode from his show, trying to train an Afghan Hound that had pulled its owner over and left her with a broken leg PATIENCE: Graeme with various dogs from his show, which he says can behave in ways which remind him of Harry Enfield’s teen Kevin
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