Katie Price asks furious three-word question in scathing rant over Myleene Klass

Katie Price has hit out at Myleene Klass after the musician was awarded an MBE earlier this year for her services to women’s health and raising awareness of miscarriage care
Christopher Sharp Trendswatch Reporter
13:58, 11 Nov 2025
Katie Price has questioned Myleene Klass’ MBE(Image: Nordin Catic, Getty Images for The Cambridge Union)
Katie Price has unleashed a furious tirade against musician Myleene Klass over her MBE honour.
Myleene, 47, received the prestigious award earlier this year for her tireless work championing women’s health, particularly her efforts to raise awareness around miscarriage care and support those who have endured such heartbreak.
But Katie, also 47, has savagely criticised the decision in a scathing outburst to Closer UK: “I’m not against this for her, but why the f*** has Myleene Klass got an MBE? For playing the classical piano? This industry is so corrupt.
“They have the same managers, they’re all clones – they all win MBEs and are fronting TV. But behind the scenes, they’re worse than we are. Turds are what they are!”
The former glamour model has never shied away from launching verbal attacks on her celebrity peers, with stars like Jodie Marsh having previously been on the receiving end of her critique.
Meanwhile, whilst Myleene initially rose to fame through music, she has since revealed how her advocacy work for women’s health has helped her discover her true purpose, reports the Mirror.
The star, who has courageously opened up about enduring four miscarriages, has worked tirelessly to shine a spotlight on the issue and ensure more women receive the healthcare they desperately need.
LONDON, ENGLAND – JANUARY 25: Katie Price (L) and Myleene Klass attend the National Television Awards cocktail reception at The O2 Arena on January 25, 2017 in London, England. (Photo by David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images )(Image: Getty)
During an appearance on Paul C Bronson’s podcast We Need To Talk, she reflected on her path to becoming a campaigner following her second pregnancy loss: “I mean, I didn’t plan on campaigning when I was lying in that bed after, I think the second miscarriage was worse than the first, I didn’t think that was possible.
“I didn’t even think it was possible that the first I thought was just awful. One of those things that people dismiss. The second one was that I thought, we have a problem.
“And by three and four I was tail-spinning. I didn’t even know who I was. I was just hell-bent on trying to keep a baby but didn’t know how to.”
LONDON, ENGLAND – AUGUST 19: Myleene Klass attends the UK Gala Screening of “Caught Stealing” at Odeon Luxe Leicester Square on August 18, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/WireImage)(Image: Getty)
Myleene also addressed how she came to understand that ensuring a child’s health during pregnancy wasn’t solely the woman’s duty, but equally the man’s responsibility.
She elaborated: “This is not just the woman’s responsibility. If you want to have a healthy child, you have to take on as much of a burden, privilege — however you want to approach this — but your health plays as big a role, if not, in some cases, more. If you’re not looking out for yourself and your wife is, yes, you’re creating a problem for her.”
Following her MBE ceremony with King Charles, she posted on Instagram: “Today I received my MBE for services to women’s health, miscarriage awareness and charity.
“I am utterly overjoyed and humbled. Having my family there, and our rainbow baby boy, was extra magical in what has at times been a very dark journey for us all.
“The string quartet played a classical version of The Carpenters’ I’m on Top of the World as I walked up to receive my honour, and King Charles himself pinned my medal on me whilst asking how my work with @tommys and their graded model of care is progressing.”
Myleene continued: “[Charles] looked surprised that this was the case and then completely agreed. Before this and my (BAFTA-nominated) documentary Myleene Klass: Miscarriage and Me, it did feel like no one really mentioned the dark secret of miscarriage — the shame, the taboo. Now, it’s said loudly in the walls of the Palace and around Westminster. For the voices that were never heard, I promise you, this is just the beginning.”




