Vogue Williams no longer speaks to 'rude' ex-husband Brian McFadden
Model Vogue Williams has shared the real reason she no longer speaks to ex-husband Brian McFadden - explaining they fell out after he failed to invite her to his wedding last year.
Vogue Williams has branded her ex-husband Brian McFadden "incredibly rude" for failing to invite her to his wedding.
The model was married to the Westlife star from 2012 until 2017 and she moved on by tying the knot with reality TV star Spencer Matthews . Now Vogue has admitted she felt hurt when Brian excluded her from his wedding to former PE teacher Danielle Parkinson in July 2025 and the former couple are no longer on speaking terms.
During an episode of her My Therapist Ghosted Me podcast, Vogue said: "He did not invite me to his new wedding. I did find that incredibly rude that he didn’t invite me, actually, and that is why we don’t talk."
She went on to joke: "[If I was there] I’d be booting him down the aisle. He’s your problem now, my friend!"
Brian was previously married to Atomic Kitten star Kerry Katona, the mother of his two grown-up daughters, Molly, 24, and Lilly-Sue, 22, and he was previously engaged to singer Delta Goodrem - and Vogue has admitted she regrets marrying Brian because the divorce was so difficult to navigate.
She said: "He was obviously engaged loads of times before. I was like, those lucky b***** … Because they never got married. They just got engaged. Logistically, that would have been great."
Vogue - who is expecting her fourth child with Spencer - went on to joke her current marriage may come to an end if Spencer doesn't stop snoring, adding: "The problem is, I’m no longer a divorcee, which I liked the sound of.
"Now I’m just married, which is a bit … You know? I’ll be a double D – a double divorcee – if Spenny keeps snoring, f****** hell. He’s snoring left, right and centre, honestly ...
"I’m like: 'Spenny, snoring, snoring!' He’s like: 'I was awake there. I know I wasn’t snoring.' I’m like: 'I’m not having a fight with you about the fact that you’re actually snoring.
"I’m sitting here listening to you. I haven’t just nudged you to say snoring. And now you’re telling me that you were awake, when you weren’t, because you were snoring!'"