If you like my videos, please subscribe to the channel to receive the latest videos
Videos can use content-based copyright law contains reasonable use Fair Use (
For any copyright, please send me a message. She's one quarter of girl band Little Mix. And Leigh-Anne Pinnock proved she has an adrenaline-fuelled side as she enjoyed a day off working on her band's new show by hopping onto a 110cc Kawasaki motocross bike on Friday.The 28-year-old looked the part as she donned motorcycle gear including foot protection and a matching helmet. And the beauty still managed to look glamorous atop the lime green bike, tossing her hair to one side and showing off her naturally pretty features. Leigh-Anne appeared to have purchased the bike from Holeshot Motocross in Salisbury, Wiltshire. The company shared the same image as her to their Facebook page and said: 'It was cool to help @leighannepinnock out from @littlemix! Hope you enjoy the 110!' The star wrote to her 5.1 million fans on Instagram, saying: 'Let's ride' with several tongue out emojis. The post comes as Little Mix's new BBC talent show, The Search, prepares to start in January. The group, which includes Leigh-Anne,Jade Thirlwall, Perrie Edwards and Jesy Nelson, have insisted there'll be no gimmicks involved; namely 'no fakes or joke acts'. 'A group has ever done a show like this. And we're going to be bloody ruthless!' Jesy, 28, told MailOnline earlier this month. 'We're on the hunt for the next best band, not any old s**t. I want the full package - dance, voice, everything. 'We’re not going to be nasty. We're not going to be like, "you’re s**t, get off!" But we will be honest. And there will be no joke acts. No fakes. Just raw talent.'The format will indeed be cut-throat, as both fully-formed bands as well as individuals will be able to apply.'You can enter as a group but we can take people out of that group. It'll be hard. And if someone doesn’t make the cut then they’re not going to get through,' Jesy went on.Perrie, 26, added: 'Well we got passed around the place [on X Factor , where the group was formed] and it was awful.' 'It was never shown on camera. We were put in so many different groups,' Jesy elaborated. 'Our emotions were up and down all the time because of this. We all told our mums we wanted to come home.'Perrie added: 'But it gave us a thicker skin, made us want it more, and made us stronger. And then when we got together it clicked, it was right.' Without directly referencing The X Factor - which has been slammed in the past for it's mentors leaving their contestants to 'get on with it', swooping in at the last minute to give them some choice advice before the live shows - Jesy said: 'We are going to be there for the groups, not just do it for the cameras. When they need us we’re going to be there.'Leigh-Anne reckons it will be strange to have the tables turned, insofar as she and the girls will b
0 Comments