Molly-Mae Hague has made a public plea for fans not to turn up to the home she shares with her beau Tommy Fury after an incident with a parent and child.
Love Island star Molly-Mae, 23, appeared flustered in a YouTube video posted to her page on Wednesday as she reacted to the ordeal where a parent drove their child to her £4 million mansion on their birthday.
The Pretty Little Thing creative director tied her hair in a bun as she sat in her walk-in closet in the mansion.
She then began by explaining she had just filmed a "massive speech" about the ordeal but decided against that approach.
Molly-Mae, who's boyfriend Tommy was recently filmed in a topless street fight at 4am, told her fans: "I just sat here and did a massive... not a speech but I just went on one with myself for about 10 minutes about an annoying situation that just happened.
"But, then I realised, actually no we're just gonna move past it and act like it didn't happen. I'm going to make one comment and one comment only. In fact how do I even word it with just making a small comment and moving past it?"
She then added: "This is not me being mean, this is not me being horrible.
"This is not me wanting a headline that says 'Molly-Mae won't take pictures with fans.'
"But I'm just gonna say this once. If you know my address, if you know where I live, if you know where Tommy and I live, please do not come ringing the gate, please, please."
Molly-Mae, who moved to the mansion after her apartment was 'ransacked and raided' last year, added: "Out in public I will take pictures until I'm blue in the face. I will literally take pictures with anybody I will never ever say no to a picture but there's a line drawn when it comes to the house."
Pointing her finger, she continued: "And if you're the parents driving your kids around on their birthdays or when they have a book that they want me to sign and you know the address and you're driving your kid round to come and see Tommy and I... I'm not sure about that.
"I have a lot to say. I'm not gonna say it, but I'm not sure about that and that's personally not a lesson that I would want to be teaching my child to let them think that that's OK with someone's personal space."
She then went into detail about the ordeal, as she said: "I just had an incident there where I've had parents driving their kids around to the house to think it's OK to drop their kids off on their birthday to get a picture – it makes me feel so... It's a very, very hard one for me because I don't want to be mean, of course I want to get a picture with someone on their birthday that's so sweet that they wanna come here on their birthday to get a picture with me but, it's just like what do I do in that situation?"
Molly-Mae then added: "I don't want you guys to think I won't take pictures, I will literally take pictures all day, every day."
She later said: "It's just an obvious thing, if you know where someone lives you just don't turn up at the house."