Esther Rantzen
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 84 |
Date of birth | June 22,1940 |
Zodiac sign | Cancer |
Born | Berkhamsted |
United Kingdom | |
Height | 163 (cm) |
Spouse | Desmond Wilcox |
Children | Rebecca Wilcox |
Joshua Wilcox | |
Miriam Wilcox | |
Job | Journalist |
Television presenter | |
Television producer | |
Education | Somerville College |
North London Collegiate School | |
Buckley Country Day School | |
Movies/Shows | That's Life! |
Hearts of Gold | |
Children in Need | |
The Big Time | |
Nationwide | |
Password | |
Excuse My French | |
Old Dogs, New Tricks | |
Esther | |
Grandchildren | Benjamin Beowulf Desmond Moss |
Parents | Katherine Flora |
Henry Barnato Rantzen | |
Siblings | Priscilla N. Taylor |
Songs | SongsKeeping a WatchJust a Classic Minute Volume 6 · 2009 Other People's BonfiresJust a Classic Minute Volume 6 · 2009 Accepting Unwanted PresentsJust a Classic Minute Volume 6 · 2009 View 25+ more |
List | Keeping a WatchJust a Classic Minute Volume 6 · 2009 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 422004 |
If Not Now, When?
Running Out of Tears: The Moving Personal Stories of ChildLine's Children Over 25 Years
Esther
Make Do and Send: Nostalgic Letters on Fifteen Years of Rationing in Britain
A Dad for All Seasons: How My Sons Raised Me
Ben: The Story of Ben Hardwick
That's Life!
Kill the Chocolate Biscuit, Or, Behind the Screen
Esther Rantzen's Childline Christmas Book
Secret Life Proof
Secret Life Sampler
Esther Rantzen Life story
Dame Esther Louise Rantzen DBE is an English journalist and television presenter, who presented the BBC television series That's Life! for 21 years, from 1973 until 1994.
Sir Anthony Hopkins to play Nicholas Winton in One Life
... The discovery saw the news get around and Sir Nicholas was later called to appear on an episode of popular Sunday night consumer affairs programme That s Life! There, as the cameras rolled, the host Esther Rantzen asked the studio audience: " Does anyone here tonight owe their life to Nicholas Winton? " It was at that point dozens sitting around the then 77-year-old stood up, revealing themselves to be grown-up versions of those little ones he had rescued, albeit just a small percentage...
Dame Esther Rantzen says her lung cancer is in stage four
...By Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporterDame Esther Rantzen has revealed her lung cancer, which she was diagnosed with in January, is in stage four...
Dame Esther Rantzen reveals lung cancer diagnosis
...Dame Esther Rantzen has revealed she has been diagnosed with lung cancer, but said that she feels " optimistic"...
Online subscription scams costing UK victims millions
... " Being conned The CBD gummies Louisa bought online were also advertised on Facebook using a host of other fake endorsements by celebrities, including journalist and television presenter Dame Esther Rantzen...
Barry Cryer: Tributes paid to veteran comedian and writer
... " Dame Esther Rantzen described Cryer as an " encyclopaedia of humour"...
Snapchat Drug Dealers Target Middlesbrough Children
... Esther Rantzen, founder of Childline, said the results were shocking ...
TV licenses: - to save the call for the government and the BBC-free over-75s licences
... Don t victimise the elderly Broadcaster, Dame Esther Rantzen, founder of the Silver Line helpline, said that many isolated older people relied on the BBC-TV, and urged the government and the society, in order to jointly find a solution...
Online subscription scams costing UK victims millions
Online subscription scams, many using bogus celebrity endorsements, are costing victims tens of millions of pounds a year, a BBC Radio 4 File on 4 programme investigation has found.
Some 300,000 people a year are thought to have been tricked into the schemes, many seemingly backed by celebrities such as comedian Russell Brand .
But in reality, the celebrities have never even heard of the products.
Many of The Scams lure victims in with fake adverts on Facebook.
File on 4 found More Than 800 on the social-networking site.
Facebook says it is investigating the Pages - and using public figures to scam people out of money is against its policy.
Desperate to ease the fibromyalgia caused by A Childhood Accident - and feeling let down by doctors who dismissed her widespread pain as a symptom of depression rather than The Other way round - Louisa Dyson, 40, from Doncaster, went online to find an alternative remedy.
On Facebook, she saw what she thought was a MailOnline article featuring Brand talking about the benefit of CBD gummies - a jellied sweet containing cannabidiol, found in cannabis, which some users say helps aches and pains.
" It was a really well written article, " Louisa told File On 4.
" I could hear him talking while I was reading it And Then got to The End and there were these people talking about these gummies.
" They were noticing results within a week. "
'Overwhelming panic'But what she thought was a £38. 99 " buy one get one free" offer on two bags of " Green CBD gummies" turned out to be a £148 payment.
" I felt That sort of overwhelming panic, " Louisa said.
" I felt hot and a bit fizzy and thought, 'Oh God, what if it's not just this £148?
"'How do I know That overnight more is not just going to go, 'Ka-ching, ka-ching, ka-ching, ka-ching,' out of my account?'"
'Huge amounts'Louisa could not get her money back but her bank stopped any more being taken from her account.
However, many are not so fortunate.
File on 4 has spoken to 20 victims of this scam alone.
One had money taken from her bank account for several months without knowing.
Another was unable to leave their house for weeks because of the stress.
" In the UK, there are in the region of 300,000 victims per year and they are losing on average around £250 - That puts it into the [region of a] £75m-a-year loss to UK victims, " fraud investigator Gillian Schonrock, who has spent The Past five years looking into online subscription scams, said.
" We're Not Talking here about the odd fraudster who has managed to Set Up one small scheme here, we're talking about thousands of scammers and huge amounts of money.
" On a global scale, we're talking $1bn [£0. 7bn] a year or more. "
'Being conned'The CBD gummies Louisa bought online were also advertised on Facebook using a host of other fake endorsements by celebrities, including journalist and television presenter Dame Esther Rantzen .
" I loathe them incorporating my name and therefore, if you like, My Reputation to sell their products, which I know nothing about, " Dame Esther said.
" It really is so anger making, now I feel helpless and I'm being conned myself.
" Facebook has an obligation whether they like it or not.
" Someone's got to make Facebook responsible and make them police The Material they carry. "
Louisa is now more cautious about what she buys online but knows such scams will continue to prey on vulnerable victims.
" There are people That are in a really dire situation and for somebody to do this to Other People at The Level they're clearly doing it, they're not Nice People , " She Said .
" They're Cashing In on people who are struggling.
" It's absolutely disgusting. "
Source of news: bbc.com