Matt Le Tissier interview: I will not be bullied into silence

What better place to meet Matt Le Tissier than The Dell pub at St Mary’s? As I arrive, the man who ended 103 years of history atSouthampton’s old ground with a fairy-tale goal is playing darts while chomping on a Double Decker. “Drink?” he says, marching to the bar.

The Telegraph Matt Le Tissier at St Mary's

Havingstood down from his ambassadorial rolein 2022 after appearing to question whether war reports describing massacres in Ukraine could be believed, Le Tissier is back working for the club he so spectacularly represented on the pitch for 16 years.

Now 57, Le Tissier does not believe that he will everreturn to mainstream punditryafter his outspoken criticism of the government’s Covid lockdown policies, but he does think that the offer of a formal role again in elite football has coincided with a certain shift.

“The whole kind of wokeism... there’s been a lot of kickback,” he says. “There’s a lot of people now who realise that perhaps it just went a bit too far. At some point it’s going to swing back where everyone’s more calm and settled. And you can speak your mind without fear of getting cancelled from jobs because you had an opinion that was outside the government narrative.”

Le Tissier then laughs out loud when I mention the headlines he recently made foraccusing Grok of “government propaganda”over plane trails – “a mountain out of a molehill,” he says – but he remains convinced thathis abrupt exit fromSoccer Saturdayin 2020was a direct result of his vocal social media presence.

He still feels vindicated on both his Covid stance (something we discussed at length in aprevious interview) and hisreluctance to endorsethe Black Lives Matter movement. He also stresses that he got some things wrong and has admitted that his family was at one stage concerned for his mental health. But he is adamant that he will not be muted.

‘It cost me my job at Sky’

“I think that’s dangerous if everybody takes that view; then you just let yourself be bullied into silence,” he says. “Rational debate is the way we move forward as a society. I’ve always been fairly opinionated. I’ve always kind of been my own man and able to make my own decisions and have my own thoughts.

“And it’s costly. It cost me my job at Sky and anyone who tries to tell you different doesn’t really know what they’re talking about. But I’d do the same again.

“There aren’t many things I’ve regretted. We’re all human and we all make mistakes. You apologise, you correct it and you move on. If you’re on the government side and you f--- up, that’s fine. But on the side I was sat, nobody will accept your apology. You’re cancelled.

“I’m quite happy plodding along. I do my after-dinner speaking, which I’ve done for the last 20-odd years since I retired, although a few years ago people were trying to get me cancelled from jobs there. Because I said something about Covid or Black Lives Matter they didn’t think that I should be able to have a job speaking at football clubs about my football career. That’s cancel culture.”

The original Soccer Saturday line-up at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton

‘Ukraine post was one of the mistakes I made’

Of his post relating to Ukraine, where he highlighted another user’s message claiming the media had lied about Covid and weapons of mass destruction in Iraq before questioning whether they were telling the truth about Russian atrocities in Bucha, Le Tissier now says: “That was one of the mistakes I made. I posted the wrong example and I apologised for it. The club were getting a load of people trying to cancel me. I was ambassador, but I wasn’t on the payroll. I just went to Martin Semmens [then the chief executive] and said: ‘Look Martin, I don’t want you getting all that hassle.’”

And what has been the response to his return?

“The fans have always been great to me and most people understand that you’re allowed to have an opinion that’s different.

“I’ll never work in television again in terms of mainstream stuff. That doesn’t bother me. Especially as now I’m back here trying to help out the club that I’ve spent a massive part of my life at. I still get a buzz with it.”

Matt Le Tissier

After beating Arsenal and almost toppling Manchester City for a place in the FA Cup final, Southampton’sextraordinary run since Tonda Eckert became managerin November has led to them surging from 21st to a Championship play-off first leg at Middlesbrough on Saturday.

‘They can’t even add up my assists’

Le Tissier’s involvement in recent months has also spread beyond hosting a club podcast alongside commercial and ambassadorial work to spending more time at the training ground. He is especially interested in learning more about the data revolution since retiring in 2003. It would certainly be fascinating to compare his running and passing stats with the present day.

“Thankfully they didn’t have those cameras and trackers back then,” he says, smiling. “All I’ve got is 540 appearances, 209 goals. They can’t even add up my assists. I’ve had a rough guess. It was probably about 100 assists on top of the 209 goals. It’s not Messi and Ronaldo figures but it’s quite good, especially since I started as a nippy winger and three-quarters of my career was probably in midfield.”

The added point here was the truly extraordinary ratio of goals that were either goal-of-the-season contenders or decisive in keeping Southampton in the top flight throughout his career. For those who doubt how he might have fared in the modern era, Le Tissier also makes an important counter: “They’re playing on carpet most of the season now. We were lucky to get grass on the pitch until about October. It has allowed coaches to try to play on the ground, which I think would have suited me better.

“I remember seeing one game, my first ever hat-trick when I was 18 against Leicester. It had snowed that day, it was muddy and I was like: ‘How did I dribble on that?’ It was mad.

“But I wouldn’t change the time that I played. People weren’t so bothered with what you did. There wasn’t social media; there wasn’t that camera-phone environment where everything is documented. Even after we got beat on a Saturday afternoon, we’d still go out and have a drink.

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“One of the reasons I stayed [he turned down Tottenham, Liverpool and Chelsea] is because I liked having a fairly normal life. Even when we were in the middle of a relegation scrap, going into work was such good fun with the characters. There was never a day where you didn’t laugh... people taking the p--- out of each other and no one getting offended.”

One of the main arteries into the city would even greet visitors with his picture and the words “You are entering God’s country”. A little-known aside in recent years is that the man they called “Le God” has also found Christ himself, becoming a regular churchgoer in 2023 after attending the funeral of the wife of Dave Merrington, the former Southampton manager and a mentor to Le Tissier’s generation. Le Tissier was baptised last year.

‘I’ve had 35,000 West Ham fans singing big nose’

Away from the extremes of social media, he says that his everyday encounters with people are invariably positive, even at fierce rivals Portsmouth, where his ability to soak up being the pantomime villain could be a lesson to the darts world champion, Luke Littler.

“I think he’s getting some bad advice – needs to be better managed,” Le Tissier says. “You can’t beat 500 or a thousand people so there’s no point trying. I’ve had 35,000 West Ham fans singing, ‘Big nose, he’s got an effing big nose!’ And I’d just go, [shrugging his shoulders and pointing to his nose] and then they’re just like: ‘Oh, we won’t bother.’ That’s a life lesson.”

I wonder also what life lessons Le Tissier – a penalty-taker extraordinaire as much for his mental certainty as technical skill – can bring to a different generation of footballer and even manager. He has already been an occasional sounding board to the chief executive Phil Parsons and hopes that the learning can be mutual.

“Tonda’s very thorough in his preparation and very focused,” Le Tissier says. “If I see things that maybe we could improve on then I’ll just give my thoughts. If that helps, then so be it. It’s nice that they’ve given me that scope. It doesn’t mean they’re always going to take my advice, but they’re happy for me to give my opinion.

“There’s lots of little things I’m interested in finding out. For example, when players might be susceptible to injuries. In our day, you just relied on the player’s honesty to go, ‘It’s all right’ or ‘I don’t think I’m fit enough’. Those kind of decisions are almost being taken out of the player’s hands now. So I’m fascinated by what those metrics are. Where does the power lie in that little dynamic?”

Tonda Eckert (L) and Pep Guardiola (R) chat on the touchline during the FA Cup semi-final

When I suggest that it must all be a balance, Le Tissier nods and we are soon back to politics. “I think that’s not just in this scenario,” he says. “I think there’s a balance that needs to be found in all walks of life; that’s kind of been missing from the whole planet in the last six years.

“There are grey areas in most things. It’s important that we can identify that and make some sensible rational decisions by getting both perspectives. Sometimes you’ll fall on one side of the argument, sometimes the other.”

Le Tissier then bristles at the idea he can be pigeonholed at any extreme of the political spectrum. “I don’t like being put in a box,” he says. “I want to sit here and judge every subject on its merits – not because you’ve got to think this way because you’re in that tribe.”

‘Name-calling just stifles debate’

So does he think that he might surprise people with his views on some subjects? “Yeah, 100 per cent. People just assume things because you think one way about a certain subject. People don’t take the time to sit and chat or listen. They just want to label you as something... anti-Semitic or racist, or whatever they want to throw at you. That whole name-calling... it just stifles debate and it detracts from actually having a conversation about the issues.”

With the old party system on the brink of disintegration, I wonder whether he might go into politics.

“I’ve been asked that a few times. I don’t think I’m particularly interested. I feel like the system is a bit rigged at the minute, a bit s---. We’d be much better off with independent MPs and no party politics. I think the country would be less corrupt.

“I also think there should be a bit more like the Swiss-style direct democracy where you get referendums on big issues that really affect your country. Nobody voted for digital IDs. Nobody put that in their manifestos and yet successive governments have tried foisting it upon us. Legally, political parties should be made to actually stick to what is in their manifesto.”

So what does he think of Donald Trump? “I don’t really know if he is trying to break the system. I don’t know if he’s part of the system.”

‘Rupert Lowe and I have similar views on quite a few bits’

And how aboutRupert Lowe, once his old boss as Southampton chairman, and now an MP and leader of a party called Restore Britain? “I think we do have some very similar views on quite a few bits; there’s also quite a few bits where I think maybe he goes a little bit too far sometimes.

“I’d like to see less power in Westminster. I’d like to see local governments have more power and people police themselves better at local levels and not give huge amounts of money to the central government to spaff on stuff that people don’t need, and don’t vote for. The less civil servants and the less politicians we have, the better.”

So what do we waste money on? “We should help the people in this country first. And, when we’ve sorted our own country out, then we’ll be in a position to help others. If every country took that attitude, then the world would be a much better place.

“When we’ve got room to take people in, and look after other people, then let’s do that. We’ve got poverty in our population. I’m not blind to what’s going on. Perhaps people in the Westminster bubble don’t get to see.”

Shortly after our interview, I then spoke with someone who, while disagreeing with many of Le Tissier’s views, wanted to emphasise how brilliant he was when they spent a day together serving food to homeless people. It is a familiar sort of story around Southampton.

And, while we certainly do not agree on everything (Le Tissier says that is healthy anyway), it is hard to dispute one observation. People are generally also more multi-layered and nuanced than either their most vociferous supporters or critics would ever acknowledge.

Matt Le Tissier interview: I will not be bullied into silence

What better place to meet Matt Le Tissier than The Dell pub at St Mary’s? As I arrive, the man who ended 103 years of history atSoutham...
“When you have the league’s leading scorer out there, …

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Benjamin Royer: Luke Kennard, when a reporter asked if there’s a bit of “how would the series go” when it comes to Luka Doncic being out:“When you have the league’s leading scorer out there, if he was, it definitely changes the dynamic of a team. And we know that, and obviously, we miss him.”

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Male birth-control breakthrough turns sperm production off and back on

Scientists have developed a method to temporarily halt the production of sperm cells without damaging surrounding tissues, an advance that could lead to a safe, long-acting and reversiblemale contraceptive.

The Independent US

Existing contraceptive methods are mostly female-centred or permanent. Since there are few effectivemale contraceptive optionsthat are reversible, men rely mainly oncondomsandvasectomies.

While vasectomy offers a long-term solution and can be reversed, many men are hesitant to undergo the procedure. This, in large part, is why developing non-hormonal methods that can temporarily halt sperm production is considered the holy grail of contraceptive research.

Now a proof-of-concept study conducted on mice over six years shows that interrupting a natural checkpoint in meiosis, the process responsible for producing sex cells, can temporarily halt sperm production.

Researchers found that JQ1, a small molecule originally developed as a research tool for studying cancer, could interfere with a specific stage of meiosis and stop the formation of sperm cells. They showed for the first time that sperm production could be safely and reversibly stopped by targeting meiosis.

“We are practically the only group that is pushing the idea that contraception targets in the testis are a feasible way to stop sperm production,” geneticist Paula Cohen, an author of the study published in the journalPNAS,said.

“Our study shows that mostly we recover normal meiosis and complete sperm function and, more importantly, that the offspring are completely normal.”

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Illustration of sperm and egg (NIH)

The researchers found that JQ1 disrupted meiosis by eliminating cells in the first stage of cell division and preventing the gene activity needed for later stages of sperm development.

In male mice given JQ1 for three weeks, sperm production stopped completely and critical aspects of meiosis, including chromosome behaviour, were disrupted.

When the treatment was discontinued, recovery followed, and within six weeks sperm production returned to normal levels.

The mice could breed after the treatment was stopped, producing healthy offspring that were also capable of reproduction.

“It shows that we recover complete meiosis, complete sperm function, and more importantly, that the offspring are completely normal,” Dr Cohen said.

In future studies, the researchers hope to develop a new form of male birth control delivered as an injection every three months.

“While acknowledging the need for robust future safety assessments of any candidate drugs,” they said in the journal, “these studies provide a blueprint for developing new contraceptive approaches that act safely and selectively within the germline.”

Male birth-control breakthrough turns sperm production off and back on

Scientists have developed a method to temporarily halt the production of sperm cells without damaging surrounding tissues, an advance t...
“Price Is Right” contestant wins largest single-game prize in show's 54-year history

A contestant on Friday's episode of The Price Is Right set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game.

Entertainment Weekly Vanessa from Virginia wins big on 'The Price Is Right'Credit: CBS

Key Points

  • Vanessa from Virginia walked away with $240,150 in cash and prizes after playing Lion's Share.

  • This new record surpasses the last, set in 2010, by more than $30,000.

After more than five decades on the air,The Price Is Rightis still breaking records.

A contestant on Friday's episode of the long-running game show set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game. After several wild rounds of the game Lion's Share, Vanessa from Virginia walked away with $240,150 in cash and prizes— the largest one-game haul a contestant has ever won in the CBS daytime show's 54-year history.

The retired veteran made her mark in a special Mother's Day-themed episode, with her daughter cheering her on from the sidelines.

Drew Carey and Vanessa from Virginia on 'The Price is Right'Credit: CBS

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Lion's Share, an MGM-branded game that premiered last year as a replacement for Pay the Rent, revolves around grocery price guessing.

In the game, each contestant is able to win up to five balls depending on their number of correct guesses. Balls are then dropped into a wind tunnel, which reveal hidden prize amounts. But that's not all: HostDrew Careythen commands contestants to choose between walking away with the dollar value displayed on the screen or risking it all to grow their earnings further.

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That's exactly what Vanessa did, and after very little deliberation. Continued correct guesses yielded more prize balls, which revealed more earnings, eventually loading her up with $227,500 in cash. A luxury trip to Morocco valued at $12,650 ultimately brought her total up to $240,150.

Vanessa's win clears the previous record by a wide margin. In 2016, contestant Christen Freeman won $210,000 in the game Cliffhangers, and also walked away with a steam iron, portable heater, and drink mixer.

Vanessa may be the biggest winner when it comes to earnings from a single game, but her $240,150 total is no match for the overall killing that one contestant made in a 2019 episode.

Michael Stouber left the roller coaster ride of an episode with a grand total of $262,743 in cash and prizes. That included $202,000 from a game of Plinko, a nearly $30,000 Showcase win, an equivalent value Nissan Sentra S, a $1,475 diamond bracelet, and more.

The Price Is Rightairs weekdays on CBS and streams on Paramount+. Check your local cable provider for exact airtimes.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Price Is Right” contestant wins largest single-game prize in show's 54-year history

A contestant on Friday's episode of The Price Is Right set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game. Key P...
600 military personnel now involved in search for missing US soldiers in Morocco

More than 600 military personnel from multiple nations are engaged in an extensive search for two U.S. soldiers who vanished in Morocco during jointU.S.-African militaryexercises.

The Independent US

The operation, now in its fifth day, involves scouring underwater caves and a vast stretch of the Atlantic coast as the African Lion drills draw to a close.

The two U.S. Army members went missing last week near the Cap Draa training area, located outside Tan-Tan, a coastal city in southwestern Morocco.

Members of the Moroccan Royal Armed Forces take part in the joint US military exercise African Lion in the Tan-Tan region of southwestern Morocco in 2024 (AFP/Getty)

Authorities believe they were on a recreational hike and may have fallen into the ocean.

The search effort, involving personnel from the U.S., Morocco, and other African Lion participants, has covered more than 17 square miles of coastal and open-ocean areas, a U.S. defense official toldThe Associated Press, speaking anonymously. "Our two soldiers and their families remain our absolute priority," the official stated.

The soldiers were participating in African Lion 26, a U.S.-led exercise launched in April across Morocco, Tunisia, Ghana, and Senegal.

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One of the soldiers, who was unable to swim, fell into the ocean around 9 p.m. local time. This prompted the rest of the group to form a human chain using their belts to try to pull them out of the water, but this proved unsuccessful,according to CBS News.

It was at this point the second soldier jumped in to try to save their colleague, only to be hit by a wave. When neither could make it back to shore, a third entered the ocean but could not reach them and had to return for their own safety.

The drills involve more than 7,000 personnel from over 30 nations and are scheduled to conclude on Friday. Since 2004, it has stood as the largest U.S. joint military exercise conducted in Africa.

U.S and Moroccan military forces take part in the 20th edition of the African Lion military exercise, in Tantan, south of Agadir, Morocco, in 2024 (AP)

The Moroccan Navy released video footage on Wednesday showcasing military divers examining caves, aircraft scanning the ocean surface, and teams of uniformed personnel alongside canine crews combing the rocky shoreline.

Several Moroccan military units are actively involved in the search. Two vessels from the maritime training component of the drills, including a Moroccan European multi-mission frigate and a French multipurpose supply vessel, have been reassigned to the operation.

A U.S. logistics vessel continues to support the exercise while also assisting in the search. Aviation equipment deployed includes a U.S. UC-35 Citation jet, a U.S. Army C-12 Huron aircraft, and Moroccan Puma and Super Puma helicopters.

Additionally, several technology vendors involved in the exercise have deployed unmanned aerial systems to aid in surveillance of the search area.

600 military personnel now involved in search for missing US soldiers in Morocco

More than 600 military personnel from multiple nations are engaged in an extensive search for two U.S. soldiers who vanished in Morocco...
Police arrest man over Morgan McSweeney phone theft

A man has been arrested on suspicion of trying to sellMorgan McSweeney’s phone after it was stolen.

The Independent US

Mr McSweeney,former chief of staff to Sir Keir Starmer, reported thathis government device had been stolenon 20 October last year. The theft became national news amid concerns that key exchanges relating to LordPeter Mandelson’s appointment as British ambassador to the US could be lost as a result of it.

Metropolitan Policesaid they arrested a 28-year-old man on suspicion of handling stolen goods as part of the investigation into the theft of amobile phonein Belgrave Road, Pimlico.

Scotland Yard took the man intopolice custodylast Wednesday and he was later bailed. He is not suspected of involvement in the original theft last year, the force added.

A spokesperson said: “Officers investigating the theft of a mobile phone in Belgrave Road, Pimlico on 20 October 2025 have arrested a 28-year-old man on suspicion of handling stolen goods.

Morgan McSweeney said there was ‘probably not as much’ about the appointment of Lord Mandelson, pictured, on his stolen phone than had already been made available to Downing Street (James Manning/PA) (PA Wire)

“The arrest took place on Wednesday, 29 April at an address in Peckham. The man was taken into police custody and later bailed.

"He is suspected of receiving the phone after it was stolen and then selling it on. He is not suspected of any involvement in the original theft.

“The phone has not been recovered.”

It is believed that messages on the phone could fall within the scope of a call by MPs for the release of all documents relating to Lord Mandelson’s posting to Washington in the wake of revelations about his links to the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

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Police arrested a suspect on 29 April (Getty)

The former adviser has said he “probably” used disappearing messages on WhatsApp in his exchanges with Lord Mandelson.

Mr McSweeney, who resigned over his part in the scandal in February, told the Foreign Affairs Committee at the end of April about the circumstances surrounding the theft of his Government phone.

“Somebody hopped onto the pavement and took my phone from me,” he claimed. “The first thing I did was to try and retrieve it. I tried to chase, which is probably a mistake. The next thing I did was I phoned No 10, and I would have gone with whatever they told me to do.”

Mr McSweeney said: “I then called 999. If No 10 had told me you need to tell the police or you need to tell the call handler what your job is, I would have done so. But otherwise, I didn’t do that as a matter of course. I didn’t in any part of my job go around saying ‘I’m a very serious and senior person’.”

When he originally called the police, he described his location as Belgrave Street – an address in Stepney, east London, rather than Belgrave Road in Pimlico.

Morgan McSweeney answered questions in front of the Foreign Affairs Committee (PA)

When asked by the committee why he’d given the wrong address, he said: “I was also quite adrenalised. So what happened was, I chased the guy who stole my phone as far as I could.”

He added: “I also said I was in Westminster.

“So I said I was in Belgrave Street, Westminster, where I think I was on… Lower Belgrave Street. So it was some months ago, and I missed the ‘Lower’. I didn’t see it.”

The former No 10 chief of staff said: “I was out of breath, I was completely exhausted, because at 48 years of age you shouldn’t be chasing people down the street, and then I was trying to go back to the original location that it happened, so that I could tell the 999 operator.”

Police arrest man over Morgan McSweeney phone theft

A man has been arrested on suspicion of trying to sellMorgan McSweeney’s phone after it was stolen. Mr McSweeney,former chief of s...
Ted Turner, media tycoon who founded CNN, dies at age 87

How Ted Turner transformed the media you consume 02:59

CBS News

Ted Turner, the media tycoon who founded CNN and led an empire that also included cable channels TBS, TNT and Turner Classic Movies as well as the Atlanta Braves and Atlanta Hawks, died Wednesday, his company Turner Enterprisessaid in a statement. He was 87.

The company said Turner died peacefully surrounded by his family after a long battle with Lewy body dementia, a progressive brain disorder that herevealed he was fightingin 2018. A spokesperson confirmed to CBS News that Turner died in Lamont, Florida, where he owned a vast estate east of the state capital of Tallahassee. CNNfirst reportedTurner's death.

"Ted was an intensely involved and committed leader, intrepid, fearless and always willing to back a hunch and trust his own judgement," CNN Chairman and CEO Mark Thompsonsaid in a statement. "He was and always will be the presiding spirit of CNN. Ted is the giant on whose shoulders we stand, and we will all take a moment today to recognize him and his impact on our lives and the world."

President Trump reacted to Turner's deathon social media, calling him "one of the Greats of Broadcast History, and a friend of mine." In the same post, Mr. Trump also criticized the stewardship of CNN, a frequent target of the president's ire, after Turner sold the news outlet.

Turner was never a man to shy away from a challenge — on land or sea.

He was the skipper who brought theAmerica's Cupyachting trophy back to the U.S. in 1977. He devoted hundreds of thousands of acres of land to save theAmerican bison. He owned the Atlanta Hawks for 19 years and the Atlanta Braves for 20, during which time the Braves won the 1995 World Series. And in 1980, he changed the way we all consumed news with the launch of CNN, the first 24-hour cable news network.

"I'm a lot of different people, if you don't know that by now," Turner told CBS' "60 Minutes" in 1979. "I'm a multifaceted person. I've got a lot of different personalities. You ought to see me at midnight on a full moon."

Ted Turner in a photo from 2008. / Credit: Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

He was a hard-drinking, cigar-smoking adventurer — with deep pockets.

"I get thousands, millions and billions mixed up," Turner said during a 2008"60 Minutes" interview. He was debating with Morley Safer whether he had lost nearly a million dollars a day or $10 million a day for two and a half years as the largest individual shareholder of AOL Time Warner. (It was the latter.) Then the corporate parent of what had been Turner's empire, the media giant washit hardwhen the dot-com bubble burst in the early 2000s.

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Turner was also known for making off-color remarks, earning him numerous nicknames, including the Mouth From The South and Captain Outrageous. He was, for some, as unlikable as he was invincible.

But in 2018, he disclosed to "CBS Sunday Morning" senior contributor Ted Koppel he was fighting Lewy body dementia.

"It's a mild case of what people have as Alzheimer's," Turner told Koppel. "It's similar to that, but not nearly as bad."

Turner married three times, including his decadelong marriage to actor and activistJane Fondafrom 1991 to 2001. In 2012, Turnertold CNNthat Fonda was probably the great love of his life, he hadn't gotten over her and he doubted he ever would.

"When you love somebody, and you really love 'em, you never stop loving 'em," he said.

In a lengthy post onInstagram, Fonda on Wednesday wrote that Turner "swept into my life, a gloriously handsome, deeply romantic, swashbuckling pirate and I've never been the same."

"Ted Turner helped me believe in myself," she wrote. "He gave me confidence. I think I did the same for him, but that's what women are raised to do. Men like Ted aren't supposed to express need and vulnerability. That was Ted's greatest strength, I believe."

Fonda wrote of Turner that he "had a big life, a brilliant mind and a soaring sense of humor," and said he "taught me more than any other person or school classes," praising his business acumen along with both his competitive and loving nature.

"I loved Ted with all my heart," she added. "I see him in heaven now with all the wildlife he helped bring back from extinction ... they're all gathered at the pearly gates applauding and thanking him for saving their species."

Turner's legacy will always be paired with CNN, and yet the gift he seemed most proud of was the natural habitats he saved by buying and protecting more wild acreage than almost anyone in the U.S.

It's tempting to call him a master of his domain, but he'd prefer caretaker. We don't own anything, he said, we just borrow it for a while.

Ted Turner, media tycoon who founded CNN, dies at age 87

How Ted Turner transformed the media you consume 02:59 Ted Turner, the media tycoon who founded CNN and led an empire that also in...

 

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