Katie Price charges fans £30 to join her virtual Girls Night In tour

Katie Price is giving fans the opportunity to join her Girls’ Night In Tour virtually – with tickets costing £30 to join in the chat. 

The TV personality, 42, is hosting the tour via Zoom chat, and took to Instagram to give a glimpse of the evening as she spoke to fans on her MacBook Air. 

Enjoying the revels of the at-home experience, she was eating a takeaway in the event which follows on from a number of tours she previously undertook before but the pandemic hit and stopped her physically appearing in theatres.   

Chatting with fans! Katie Price is giving supporters the opportunity to join her Girls Night In tour virtually, and tickets for the Zoom chat will cost £30

Katie is running the nights from Thursday 11 March to the following Wednesday and will chat for an allocated one hour to her fans each night. 

The mother-of-five launched the show on Thursday and appeared comfortable with her fans as she ate dinner and chatted to them online.

She penned: ‘Curry & my zoom calls with you all for my Girls Night In. Loved it tonight! If you wanna join me grab tickets online. I speak to everybody’. 

The description on the site reads: ‘Grab a cup of tea & join me on your sofa for a girls night in. You will be able to join me on a video conference call. I will be chatting about what I’ve been up to during lockdown, my new ventures and my family life’

Online: The TV personality, 42, will be hosting the tour via Zoom chat, and took to Instagram to give a glimpse of the evening

Online: The TV personality, 42, will be hosting the tour via Zoom chat, and took to Instagram to give a glimpse of the evening 

Tour:  The show, which will run until next Wednesday, promises to give fans the opportunity to chat to the star, as she said she 'speaks to everybody'

Tour:  The show, which will run until next Wednesday, promises to give fans the opportunity to chat to the star, as she said she ‘speaks to everybody’

Katie sported her natural dark tresses in a cropped hairstyle and highlighted her features with a heavy makeup palette. 

The show promises to give fans the opportunity to chat to the star, as she said she ‘speaks to everybody’.  

During Friday’s chat, Katie revealed how her son Harvey calls her to say he needs her after returning to residential school during the chat with a number of supporters.  

She said: ‘I need you. I’m like: “What do you mean you need me Harv?” And he’s like, “well I want mummy cuddles and kisses”.

Doting mother: Katie revealed how her son Harvey calls her to say he needs her after returning to residential school during the chat with a number of supporters on the Zoom call

Doting mother: Katie revealed how her son Harvey calls her to say he needs her after returning to residential school during the chat with a number of supporters on the Zoom call 

‘And I’m like “well you will at the weekend” and then you just have to divert him off the conversation, but it is hard.’ 

This comes after Katie appeared on the Channel 4 talk show, Steph’s Packed Lunch on Wednesday. 

She expressed heartache over online bullying and trolling after her disabled son Harvey was subjected to years of abuse.  

She has been campaigning for Harvey’s Law – legislation which would make it illegal to troll or abuse others online and would put offenders on a register. 

Important: Katie appeared on Steph's Packed Lunch on Wednesday - she has been campaigning for Harvey's Law - legislation which would make it illegal to troll or abuse others online (pictured with her beloved son)

Important: Katie appeared on Steph’s Packed Lunch on Wednesday – she has been campaigning for Harvey’s Law – legislation which would make it illegal to troll or abuse others online (pictured with her beloved son)

Harvey, 18, is blind and has Prader-Willi syndrome and ADHD.

Speaking on Steph’s Packed Lunch, the star launched her new initiative, called Track A Troll, as she discussed her petition to make verified ID a legal requirement for anyone opening a social media account. 

She said: ‘Today, live, I’ve started a new petition, and it’s called Track a Troll… Any online sites or apps should need you to sign in with ID, or if you’re under 18 your parent or guardian can sign you in.’ 

Like all petitions, Katie needs 100,000 signatures for this to be debated in Parliament. 

Cruel: Katie has expressed heartache over online bullying and trolling after her disabled son Harvey was subjected to years of abuse

Cruel: Katie has expressed heartache over online bullying and trolling after her disabled son Harvey was subjected to years of abuse

She believes if Track a Troll were to be passed as a law by Parliament, it would force the social media houses to comply.

She explained: ‘The future is online. But people are committing suicide, and trolling causes mental health [issues]. So, I think there should be some kind of law where perpetrators should be IDed.’ 

Katie continued: ‘I get messages all the time through social media, asking for me to help. My previous petition, Harvey’s Law, went to Parliament and they all agree with me that something needs to happen.’

She added: ‘We’re all allowed a freedom of speech and I’m not trying to take any of that away. 

‘We can all have banter, we can all have a joke, but you know when you’re crossing a line… If you do have to start giving ID, people will think twice about what they write.’ 

On a mission: Katie has spoken before a parliamentary committee in a bid to combat trolls, and has demanded MPs change the law so online bullies face justice (pictured in February 2018)

On a mission: Katie has spoken before a parliamentary committee in a bid to combat trolls, and has demanded MPs change the law so online bullies face justice (pictured in February 2018)