Paris Fury says Molly-Mae Hague would have been ‘tortured by fans’ at Venezuela’s hen do as she explains why the influencer didn’t attend

Paris Fury has set the record straight on why Molly-Mae Hague didn’t attend her daughter Venezuela’s hen do last month.

Bride-to-be Venezuela, 16, hosted a wild bash with hundreds of guests in March ahead of her wedding to fiancé Noah Price, 17.

Paris explained why Molly-Mae didn’t attend on the Not My Bagg podcast after fans questioned the pregnant influencer’s absence from the celebrations.

‘I spoke to Molly literally a couple of nights before and obviously she’s pregnant’, Paris said.

‘And I said “Molly obviously you know the hen nights on” and she said they’ve booked a vacation away her and Tommy and I went “do not blame you”.

‘I said there was three or four hundred guests at her hen night all young teenage girls and all of them fans of Molly Mae. You know she’ll be tortured. She got tortured at her [Venezula’s] birthday.’

Paris Fury has set the record straight on why Molly-Mae Hague didn't attend her daughter Venezuela's hen do last month

Paris Fury has set the record straight on why Molly-Mae Hague didn’t attend her daughter Venezuela’s hen do last month

Paris explained Molly-Mae would have been 'tortured by fans' at the bash after fans questioned the pregnant influencer's absence from the celebrations

Paris explained Molly-Mae would have been ‘tortured by fans’ at the bash after fans questioned the pregnant influencer’s absence from the celebrations

Molly-Mae and her fiancé Tommy Fury are counting down to their second child’s due date, which is June 12. They are parents to daughter, Bambi, three. 

The Love Island star, 26, celebrated the impending arrival of her second child with an intimate baby shower brunch this week.

Dressed in a chic white co-ord, Molly cradled her blossoming bump and admitted ‘not long now!’. 

Molly’s manager Francesca Britton organised the party, which included bouquet-making, games and cake decorating. 

Gifts for the party included expensive Diptyque candles and fragrance. 

In her latest YouTube vlog, Molly spoke about the ways in which parenthood has changed her, revealing that she has become ‘so scared of everything’ since having Bambi.

Molly explained in the past year she had gone from someone who didn’t scare easily to now ‘seeing danger around every single corner’.

She said: ‘A lot of things terrify me at the minute. Since becoming a mum I have become so scared of everything – every time I leave the house, every time I get in an Uber or every time I get on a plane. 

‘I never ever used to be scared of anything. Like literally all my friends would say  “You’re so brave, you’re the non-scared one in the group”.

‘Like if I go skiing or anything I’ll throw myself down a mountain. I don’t really have much fear, I’ll watch any horror movie, I’ll go on any rollercoaster.

‘But in the last year I’d say, I see danger around every single corner. Every single time I leave the house I think something’s going to happen to me. Every single time Bambi goes somewhere, I’m worrying that something’s going to happen to her.’

Molly said she believed the change stemmed from the fact she now had the responsibility of making sure she was there for Bambi, saying ‘I’m not just living for me anymore, I’m living for a child’.

Bride-to-be Venezuela, 16, hosted a wild bash with hundreds of guests in March ahead of her wedding to fiancé Noah Price, 17

Bride-to-be Venezuela, 16, hosted a wild bash with hundreds of guests in March ahead of her wedding to fiancé Noah Price, 17

Molly-Mae and her fiancé Tommy Fury are counting down to their second child's due date, which is June 12. They are parents to daughter, Bambi, three

Molly-Mae and her fiancé Tommy Fury are counting down to their second child’s due date, which is June 12. They are parents to daughter, Bambi, three 

‘I feel like when you become a mum your sense of danger just personifies,’ she explained. ‘I don’t want to sound deep, but it’s quite debilitating at times.

‘Even when we’ve been going into the city whilst we’re here, every time I get in an Uber I’m just praying to get out of the Uber. I’m like “I just want to get out, I just want to be safe, I want to be on ground”.’

She went on: ‘I think it’s because when you have responsibility of someone else you have to be present for someone else. I’m not just living for me anymore, I’m living for a child and I’m her protector. 

‘I just think you have so much more responsibility when you become a parent that you have to sort of safeguard yourself a bit more and make sure you protect yourself to be there for them.

‘So you don’t just have the worry of keeping them alive, you also have the worry of keeping yourself alive.’

Joking that Tommy was ‘looking at me like I’ve lost my damn mind’, the Maebe founder insisted she hadn’t always felt this way. 

‘I never used to be scared of anything,’ she said. ‘You put me on any rollercoaster, any fairground ride, I’ll walk down a dark alley – I am that girl. 

‘I never used to fear anything and now I’m the polar opposite where I literally look at a car and I see danger.’