The It Girls of the nineties and noughties were notorious for their antics, flitting from party to party, embarking on scandalous love affairs and wearing skimpy clothing.
However now society bible Tatler has compiled the list of the new generation of socialites who are lighting up the social scene - and asking how they shape up compared to the legends who came before them.
Among those featured are Princess Diana s twin nieces Lady Eliza and Amelia Spencer, 28, who the magazine compared to former model and actress Isabella Anstruther-Gough-Calthorpe, now 41.
Meanwhile supremely popular Evie Henderson is said to be the new iteration of Noughties It Girl Lady Victoria Hervey, and Stella Jones, daughter of the Clash guitarist Mick Jones, is named the new rock chick on the scene after the rebellious socialite Amanda de Cadenet.
Margam Park and Castle: A landscape and buildings with an incredible tale spanning millennia countrylife.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from countrylife.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Thousand of businesses have repaid nearly £450million in taxpayer money claimed for staff wages during the pandemic, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.
A string of housebuilders, retailers and FTSE100 firms are among those that have handed back millions after successfully shoring up their finances in the crisis.
Campaigners last night welcomed the wave of repayments and called on companies to help rebuild the public finances when the economy reopens.
Brighter outlook: Campaigners welcomed the wave of repayments and called on companies to help rebuild the public finances when the economy reopens
The news comes after this newspaper revealed companies owned by super-rich individuals with a combined wealth of £19.4billion have taken money from the emergency scheme.
Relief as firms pay back £450m in furlough cash dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A rider who sued the owner of a naughty horse that crushed her during a fox hunt has lost her £100,000 legal battle after a judge ruled the animal probably had a heart attack.
Lisa Ford suffered multiple fractures, including a smashed pelvis and internal injuries, when her horse reared up and fell backwards onto her while she was riding with the Beaufort Hunt in September 2018.
The Beaufort Hunt is one of the oldest and largest fox hunting packs in England and is based at the Duke s 52,000-acre Badminton Estate in Gloucestershire - home of the famous horse trials, and the place where the game of badminton was invented in 1863.