Olivia Attwood set pulses racing on Friday as she enjoyed a night out at Langan’s Brasserie in Mayfair.
The Loose Women star, 33, who was joined by her pal Abi Hitchen, looked incredible as she cut a stylish figure in a black blazer which boasted satin lapels and a pair of satin hot pants.
Showcasing her long legs, Olivia also wore sheer black tights and boosted her frame with black court stiletto heels.
The reality TV star toted her essentials in a green Hermès Mini Kelly and further accessorised with gold statement earrings.
To complete her look, the beauty styled her honey-blonde locks up in an elegant updo and wore a flawless palette of makeup.
Meanwhile, her pal Abi cut a stylish figure in a figure-hugging mini-black dress and sheer black tights.
Olivia Attwood set pulses racing on Friday as she enjoyed a night out at Langan’s Brasserie in Mayfair
The Loose Women star, 33, who was joined by her pal Abi Hitchen, looked incredible as she cut a stylish figure in a black blazer which boasted satin lapels and a pair of satin hot pants
Showcasing her long legs, Olivia teamed sheer black tights with the fashionable look before boosting her frame with black court stiletto heels
The stylish ensemble boasted a gold-toned button-up fastening and white pleated cuffs.
She added inches to her frame with a pair of black court stiletto heels and styled her brunette locks in a similar updo to Olivia.
Olivia’s outing comes after she revealed she finds it hard to feel sorry for herself or others in the influencing industry because of their ‘amazing lives’ and the freedom to walk away from the job.
Olivia took part in the 2017 series of Love Island, placing third with her ex-boyfriend Chris Hughes, and has since risen to stratospheric fame with ITV presenting roles and a successful podcast, So Wrong it’s Right.
But speaking to beauty expert Caroline Hirons on the podcast, Glad We Had This Chat, Olivia said: ‘There’s bad sides to every single job, of course.
‘And we should all be able to recognise the negatives that any job has but I do have a hard time feeling sorry for myself or anyone in our industry.
‘Like, we live the most amazing lives and it’s a very privileged place to be.
‘When you have a platform and people want to listen to you and they want to engage with you, I think, how lucky can you actually be?’
The reality TV star toted her essentials in a green Hermès Mini Kelly and further accessorised with gold statement earrings
The beauty also styled her honey-blonde locks up in an elegant updo
To complete her look, she further accessorised with a Chanel layered pearl necklace and wore a flawless palette of makeup
The Bad Boyfriends host also flashed a glimpse of her peachy derriere as she entered the restaurant
Meanwhile, her pal Abi cut a stylish figure in a figure-hugging mini-black dress and sheer black tights
‘And if you don’t like it, you can get out of it, you don’t have to stay in it and keep telling everyone how much you hate it and how miserable you are.
‘You can just go and do something else. I know that sounds a little bit callous, but I just think you have to hit the nail on the head with it a little bit.’
Olivia went from competing in an ITV reality show to hosting her own in less than six years as the show, Bad Boyfriends, aired on the channel last month.
While many former Love Island contestants have struggled when coming to terms with overnight fame, the Celebs Go Dating star revealed she found the whole process ‘freeing’.
Olivia, who had started work as a Grid Girl for Monster aged 19, said: ‘I was working for a lot of like energy drink companies going around doing the F1, and it was a very restrictive existence.’
‘We all had to look the same, we had to have the set nail colour, the set hair colour. There was one uniform size. It was a pressure.’
‘It was like water off a duck’s back. So coming out of Love Island, I did have the experience of going in with however many thousand followers and coming out on like a million, so that was very surreal.’
It comes after she revealed she finds it hard to feel sorry for herself or others in the influencing industry because of their ‘amazing lives’ and the freedom to walk away (Pictured last month)
‘But I found the whole thing quite freeing because for the first time ever it was me as an individual and what I had to say people cared about.’
‘It was exciting and I think I adapted pretty well you know, the hardest part of me coming out of that show was the relationship and trying to navigate that, and then that fell apart and that was just messy.’
Olivia went on to explain that a diagnosis of ADHD, when she was in her early twenties, helped her navigate fame because ‘I knew what was good and what was bad for me in terms of triggering those symptoms’.
Caroline Hirons Glad We Had This Chat podcast is available on Apple, Spotify, and all major podcast platforms.