Nadia reminds me of that caricature coward in the pub toilet who tells his mates to "hold me back or I'll kill 'im (or smash her to the ground)". Only the offending person has already left the scene, and the coward is hiding in the toilet lest they return.
I'm not really in favour of cat fights or battles of the fishwives, and I'm definitely not a fan of the racist reactionary Hopkins, but there is nothing so cravenly pathetic as seeing Nadia wait until the door has closed to say something as relatively innocuous as 'silly woman' to Hopkins, then rushing off to the toilet with Patsy Kensit and ranting about how hard and tough she is.
The truth is that Nadia is scared of Hopkins, who has had her measure since day one.
I'm not really in favour of cat fights or battles of the fishwives, and I'm definitely not a fan of the racist reactionary Hopkins, but there is nothing so cravenly pathetic as seeing Nadia wait until the door has closed to say something as relatively innocuous as 'silly woman' to Hopkins, then rushing off to the toilet with Patsy Kensit and ranting about how hard and tough she is.
The truth is that Nadia is scared of Hopkins, who has had her measure since day one.