James Warren is the 'most spoilt kid in Britain' his mum even squeezes his spots for him, but now he wants to stop her splashing out so much cash on him. On Mother’s Day, children across the country yesterday gave thanks to the amazing women who have given their all to make them happy. But one teenager needed to go the extra mile to repay his doting parent, after claiming he is the ‘most spoilt kid in Britain’.
James Warren says he wants his mother, Ornella, to stop spending money on him after she showered him with £10,000 worth of treats in just six weeks. The unemployed 19-year-old says she even squeezes his spots. Mr Warren said: ‘She does everything for me and she’s the best mum in the world. I do worry about her spending so much on me. We’re not the richest family and we have to pay for everything. Mum’s a bit addicted to spending and it’s me who works out what she spends.’
Mr Warren said, in the past year, his mother, a former teacher, had used her retirement payouts to buy him a £3,500 cookery course in Italy, a £1,000 Armani suit, a professional photoshoot worth £500, a £1,000 month-long trip to Italy, shoes worth at least £500 and thousands of pounds of clothes. She had also gelled his hair for him, got up at 3am to take him a coat while he was out with friends and served him three-course meals in bed.
I'm not sure if this will work outside the UK.
YouTube link.
Mr Warren, from Loughborough in Leicestershire, added: ‘I think it could easily be more than £20,000 she has spent just in the past year.’ Mrs Warren, 57, originally from Italy, said: ‘I do spoil him. It’s all true. I do it to make him confident and independent.’ Mr Warren, whose father Tony is a headteacher, said he would be spending all his £51.85 jobseeker’s benefit on his mother yesterday. Last year, he featured in BBC3’s Sun, Sex And Suspicious Parents reality show, which if you're really desperate for something to do, you can watch here, here, here and here.
1 comment:
How do you make someone independent by doing everything for them?
Her being an Italian mother explains something, doesn't it? Or is that just a silly national stereotype?
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