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Tinder Swindler victim exposes similar men using dating apps to scam women in wild new Netflix show

Tinder Swindler victim exposes similar men using dating apps to scam women in wild new Netflix show

Daily Mail​21 hours ago
A victim of the infamous Tinder Swindler is now set to expose a slew of similar men who are using dating apps to scam women as part of a wild new Netflix show.
Entitled Love Con Revenge, the series will follow Cecilie Fjellhøy - who said she was conned out of $270,000 by fraudster Simon Leviev, real name Shimon Hayut, years ago - as she sets out on a quest to 'unmask other scammers' and help victims 'reclaim their lives.'
She teamed up with private investigator Brianne Joseph 'to delve into real schemes on behalf of women and men who can't find help through traditional avenues,' per a Netflix press release.
A trailer for the new show contains just a small glimpse of the drama that will unfold in the series.
It begins with footage that shows Cecilie confronting an unidentified man over the phone.
'I'll give you the short story: I'm not the swindler. I'm just a guy doing the best I can and being supported by wonderful people. I'm talking $10,000 every month,' he says.
While speaking to the camera in another clip, Cecilie admits, 'I never thought that I'd become a victim of romance fraud.'
It then shows a series of various victims detailing how much they had lost, ranging from $150,000 to a whopping $2 million.
She now set to expose a slew of similar men who are using dating apps to scam women as part of a wild new Netflix show
'These scammers have been getting away with this for way too long,' Cecilie continues. 'I just had to do something. Expose them and bring them to justice.'
One woman, named Jill Schardein, details in the teaser: 'I met a man online. He was charming, handsome, a lady's man, the perfect man. I mean, really, it was almost too good to be true.'
Another shares: 'He called me up in desperation, saying that he needed money. It was only gonna be for 48 hours with the understanding that he'd pay it back.
'But I looked in my account, and I just saw ATM withdrawals.'
Private investigator Brianne told the camera in a different clip, 'I'm like a pit bull. When I grab hold of something, I don't let it go.'
The six-episode show will premiere on Netflix on September 5.
While speaking with the Today show about the new series, Cecilie explained that she was inspired after the immense reaction to Netflix's The Tinder Swindler, the popular 2022 crime doc that detailed Simon's crimes.
'I never imagined my story would resonate the way it has,' she said. 'Since The Tinder Swindler, I've heard from people all over the world who've been targeted by criminals hiding behind love.
Entitled Love Con Revenge, the series will follow Cecilie as she sets out on a quest to 'unmask other scammers' and help victims 'reclaim their lives'
'Love Con Revenge is a way for me to use what I've learned to help others heal, reclaim their voices, their power, and their lives.'
Throughout 2018 and 2019, Simon allegedly conned multiple single women who he met through Tinder, including Cecilie, into giving him hundreds of thousands of dollars, earning him the nickname the Tinder Swindler.
It's been said he pretended to be a billionaire son of Israeli diamond merchant Lev Leviev, and reportedly stole an estimated $10 million over the years.
Simon was ultimately arrested and charged with fraud, theft, and forgery and spent five months in prison before he was released on 'good behavior' in May 2020.
He was also ordered to pay his victims $43,289, and to pay a fine of $5,771 under the terms of a plea deal.
Norwegian graduate student Cecilie, who was 29 when she dated Simon, claimed she gave him more than $270,000 over the course of their relationship, after they connected via Tinder in January 2018.
She explained in the Netflix doc that she was completely wooed by Simon after he flew them from Bulgaria from London via a private plane for their first date.
It's been said that Simon would shower the women he met on the dating app with expensive trips and opulent gifts, using the money he had taken from his other victims.
Another shares: 'He called me up in desperation, saying that he needed money. It was only gonna be for 48 hours with the understanding that he'd pay it back'
He would then allegedly ask them for funds - claiming he was in danger and needed money to protect his identity from people who were out to kill him due to his dangerous diamond business.
When Netflix released the doc in 2022, Simon denied all of the claims made in the show and alleged that Netflix had twisted the story to make him look bad.
'They presented it as a documentary but in truth it's a completely made-up movie,' he told Inside Edition. 'I'm the biggest gentleman in the world.
'I am not this monster that everybody has created. I was just a single guy that wanted to meet some girls on Tinder.
'They weren't conned and they weren't threatened. No, I am not, and I never presented myself the son of a billionaire diamond mogul.
'I'm a legit businessman. I got into Bitcoin in 2011, it was nothing. I don't need to say how much it is worth now.
'I feel bad for something that I didn't do? No, I feel bad for whatever happened to myself. I want to clear my name. I want to say to the world, this is not true.
'I am not a fraud and I'm not a fake. People don't know me, so they cannot judge me.'
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As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot
As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

As the elite FLOCK to an Australian capital city for art and parties... the poor face an army of security guards: CANDACE SUTTON exposes disturbing crisis at popular tourist spot

It is the time of year when Sydney and Melbourne 's elite flock to Australia's booming northern-most city of Darwin for its horseracing carnival, prestigious Aboriginal art fair and, this year, the lawyer's picnic that is the trial of Netflix star Matt Wright. Meanwhile, Thompson Nganjmirra, 76, is sitting in a park in central Darwin. He nervously eyes a growing storm in the distance and wonders whether he will have to spend the night sleeping in the rain. Thompson tells the Daily Mail that he is one of Darwin's 'long-grassers' - the local name for the city's homeless population. They are known as such because they slept and begged in the tall spear grasses which once ringed the city. Sitting in Civic Park, just a few hundred metres from the Northern Territory Parliament and Supreme Court complex, Thompson is without a regular bed to sleep in or even a blanket. He has been caught short in the rain before. Darwin is a city divided. By most indicators, it is booming. Property prices have surged and rents are high. The warm, dry summer attracts a huge influx from out of state and a party-like atmosphere in town. Meanwhile, the Northern Territory's homelessness rate is twelve times the national average. Ninety per cent of the homeless in Darwin are Indigenous, many sleeping in the city's parks and bushland. 'Sometimes it's hard to get enough to eat,' Thompson admits. The Daily Mail spent four days recently reporting from Darwin and speaking to the locals - and learned that much has changed in the city over the past six years. That was when Darwin's politicians and civic leaders turned to private security firms to patrol areas of Darwin's CBD and suburbs during the day and night - including the khaki-clad Public Order Response Unit, or PORU, focused on the suburbs; and the 'blue shirts' of Territory Protective Services, who patrol the city's CBD. Also on patrol is Larrakia Nation, a service run by the peak group of the local traditional Aboriginal landowners. The group aims to prevent alcohol-related disputes and resolve problems and conflicts. Thompson shrugs his shoulders at the mention of the 'blue shirts', who, locals said, often wake sleeping people in the night to move them on. 'Some are good, some bad,' Thompson said. 'They tell us we can go here, but not there. It's okay if you have a place to sleep.' He breaks into his native language, Kunwinjku, to speak to his niece, 54-year-old Lillian Yulidji, who is sheltered with her uncle and other relatives under a large park tree. 'Blackfellas are used to them (the blue shirts) now,' Thompson said. A spokesman for the so-called 'blue shirt' company, TPS, said it had been contracted by the NT Police to maintain public order for six years and did not condone violence or ill-treatment of Darwin residents. With Darwin's peak tourist season underway - the art fair lasting four days, attracting buyers from Sydney and Melbourne's elite, and the Darwin Cup running at the Darwin Turf Club at Fannie Bay - both PORU and Larrakia Nation were patrolling the shores of Lake Alexander, at East Point Park. When the Mail visited on an afternoon late last week, Aboriginal family groups were gathered together while white people jogged and exercised along the boardwalks. Sitting amid council signs warning 'no camping or sleeping overnight', the families sat watching the sun sink over the water. Some of the group were drinking. Officers from PORU and Larrakia spoke with them. They dragged one old man off into a van which had a containment unit at its rear, much like a police paddy wagon. Political debate erupts The treatment of the city's homeless population and the government's crime policies are a hot political debate. Darwin mayoral candidate Leah Potter, who is campaigning on an 'end homelessness' ticket at this month's council election, told the Mail 'it is not a crime to homeless'. Potter was furious about plans by the NT government to further expand its law enforcement forces. The government wants to arm transit and public housing safety officers - who currently patrol buses, supermarkets and public housing - with firearms as part of a crime reform package. The new police auxiliaries will be on the streets by 2026. 'You can just imagine how that will play out,' she said. 'It is not a crime to be homeless, but what could possibly go wrong?' Meanwhile, the NT Government has just issued a new Bus Dress Code policy, placing signs on buses advising passengers with 'dirty or stained clothes' will be refused travel. 'This is clearly aimed at Indigenous people, the homeless and the mentally ill,' Potter claimed. 'When you have no roof or running water, or access to laundry facilities, meeting these so-called 'standards' is impossible. So, they're punished for poverty.' The Northern Territory Department of Logistics and Infrastructure told the Daily Mail that its Rules of Travel, displayed on all buses, 'ensure a safe and respectful environment for everyone using public transport'. A spokesman said that under those rules, 'a passenger could be asked to leave a bus if they are wearing soiled clothing that may leave dirt, grease, bodily fluids or damage a seat which could be used by another passenger'. They said that drivers or transit officers could 'exercise discretion and ask a person not to board the bus'. However, 'it is extremely rare for someone to be refused entry due to hygiene.' Potter, who runs the Sunset Soup Kitchen in Darwin, is on personal terms with most of the 200 Indigenous rough sleepers who populate the inner city, some of them regularly setting up camp in her street. She is a Territorian by birth, with a rollercoaster history living in Sydney and Melbourne. 'I am campaigning to change the shame, disempowerment and other factors contributing to homelessness,' she said, 'which is inequality, education, health, joblessness, imprisonment, violence against women. 'Aboriginal women are killed in alarming numbers. They are more than 10 to 12 times more likely to be victimised, assaulted and murdered than any other group of women.' But she admits she is unlikely to win against the twelve other candidates, and that her Roadmap Out of Homelessness 'is a really hard sell to Territorians'. 'It's about dignity and respect. You've got 40kg blackfellas about to die of chronic disease. They are human beings,' she said. 'But instead the NT Government wants to focus on fining people for breaking the law because sleeping in public parks is illegal.' 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11 shows you wouldn't expect to see on YouTube — from golf to Spitting Image
11 shows you wouldn't expect to see on YouTube — from golf to Spitting Image

Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Times

11 shows you wouldn't expect to see on YouTube — from golf to Spitting Image

Are you watching YouTube on your television at home? If the answer is yes, you're part of a revolution in how we are all enjoying content from the comfort of our front rooms. Although the video-sharing platform has been around for more than two decades, in recent years the proliferation of smart TVs has seem more and more of us tuning in to its content on the biggest screen in the house. A recent Ofcom report revealed that YouTube's in-home viewing is expanding rapidly: there was a 13 per cent increase in just the past year. It now has a 14 per cent share of total viewing, placing it behind the BBC, on 19 per cent, but ahead of ITV (12 per cent), Netflix (8 per cent) and other broadcasters (7 per cent). And it's not just younger viewers driving the trend. Over-55s are watching almost double the amount of YouTube content on their TVs as they once were: 11 minutes a day last year, compared with just six minutes in 2023. So if you're one of the recent converts and looking for high-quality content on your big screen, what should you be watching? From politics and comedy to music and movies, here are 11 channels worth trying out. In the Eighties and Nineties the satirical puppet show attracted millions of viewers to ITV. Now it's back, on YouTube, called Spitting Image presents: The Rest is Bulls*!t. Presented by Prince Harry and Paddington Bear and overseen by the comedians Matt Forde and Al Murray, it is a parody of a vodcast that promises to bring regular a flow of foul-mouthed satire to viewers. You can check out the first episode on the channel now. With more than nine million subscribers, the Fab Four haven't faded away in the digital age. Viewers are treated to a veritable treasure trove of playlists and archive footage of the band, as well as some fascinating insights into how they made Now and Then, released in 2023 and dubbed the Beatles' last song. Add to that clips and short documentaries about the influence of the band, plus almost every song available to stream, and any music fan will be glad they stopped by. You might also like @TheRollingStones and @thebeachboys. Named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential digital voices 2025, the 31-year-old British comedian and writer is best known to YouTube audiences as the presenter of the interview series Chicken Shop Date. Guests treated to her dry wit and sardonic interviewing style over a bag of chips and a box of nuggets include Ben Stiller, Jennifer Lawrence, Ryan Reynolds and Ed Sheeran. With more than three million subscribers on her YouTube channel, Dimoldenberg has risen so sharply she also presents official red carpet coverage from the Oscars, the Brits and the Golden Globes. If classic movies are your thing, try this channel before you pay for any streaming services. It has more than 350 classic films, many of which have been remastered to improve their quality. They include the 1971 western Hannie Caulder, the 1976 war-adventure film Shout at the Devil and the 1971 version of Black Beauty starring Mark Lester and Uschi Glas. Similar channels worth browsing are PizzaFlix, Classic Entertainment and The Best Film Archives. Gary Lineker's Goalhanger podcast stable offers a selection of video podcasts on YouTube, many of which have exclusive content that you won't hear on the audio versions. History fans can watch The Times columnist Dominic Sandbrook and Tom Holland bring alive everything from the execution of Mary Queen of Scots to the origins of the First World War with The Rest is History. The former Downing Street director of communications Alastair Campbell and one-time Conservative MP Rory Stewart 'agree disagreeably' about the week's political events on The Rest is Politics, while Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer and Micah Richards debate all things football over a glass of red on The Rest is Football. If you're more interested in economics, try Robert Peston and Steph McGovern's The Rest is Money, and for TV, music and film fans there's Richard Osman and Marina Hyde on The Rest is Entertainment. Cartographical errors have never been so entertaining. A mix of Monty Python and Horrible histories, this unusual but wildly popular channel run by the comedian Jay Foreman and the former geography teacher Mark Cooper-Jones offers a heady mix of deadpan humour, absurd cutaways and visual humour to not just entertain but educate too. Each episode (many of which attract more than four million views) begins with a simple map-based geographical question such as 'what's the world's oldest border?' before taking viewers on quite the ride. If you miss the A-Z street atlas this is the channel for you. The broadcaster has been embracing YouTube for several years with impressive results, growing a large and loyal audience for full episodes of Channel 4 shows uploaded to the platform. As well as the usual array of clips and trailers for new shows, visitors to the Channel 4 YouTube channel can access full episodes of a number of the most popular shows, including Grand Designs, Gogglebox, First Dates, Travel Man, as well as extensive exclusive clips from across the network's back catalogue. The British comedian John Oliver has been the toast of late-night HBO (and in the UK, Sky) for more than a decade thanks to Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, his weekly satire of the biggest news stories. But YouTube fans get even more of the former Daily Show reporter's humour and investigations when they go online. Not only are many of his full-length shows available to stream on the official YouTube channel, there are many web-exclusive missives available on a variety of subjects, from rocks and 'snack video games' to Pringles (yes, the crisps) and The Da Vinci Code. Ever wondered what sex was like in the Middle Ages or how much damage a Napoleonic cannon could do? Well, these are just some of the questions posed on this seriously addictive channel for history buffs, which blends a traditional TV-documentary-history-show feel with just enough social media flourish to appeal to all ages. Best of all, it has serious historical chops, with Dan Snow, Suzannah Lipscomb, Tristan Hughes, Alice Loxton and Luke Tomes among the presenters bringing the past alive. The entrepreneur Steven Bartlett may be best known to many as one of the investors on BBC's Dragons' Den, but his YouTube channel is a true behemoth, with more than 11.5 million subscribers. His one-on-one interviews are sleek and well produced and offer viewers long-form discussions with notable figures from the world of politics, business, sport, entertainment and academia. Guests have included the former prime minister Boris Johnson, the psychologist Jordan Peterson and the 'godfather of AI', Geoffrey Hinton. He also hosts panel discussions on topics from feminism to the threat of the Third World War. A great British success story on YouTube, Shiels started his channel almost 15 years ago as a way to promote his golf coaching business, but since then it has grown into a fully formed golf entertainment experience. There are still reviews of equipment on there, but these days the channel has mostly given way to well-produced long-form videos, with Rick and big name players involved in various challenges round the most beautiful and exotic courses. Just like you don't have to be a car nut to like Top Gear, there's something charming and fun about this channel that will draw in viewers regardless of their handicap, or indeed, knowledge of golf. Love TV? Discover the best shows on Netflix, the best Prime Video TV shows, the best Disney+ shows , the best Apple TV+ shows, the best shows on BBC iPlayer , the best shows on Sky and Now, the best shows on ITVX, the best shows on Channel 4 streaming, the best shows on Paramount+ and our favourite hidden gem TV shows. Don't forget to check our comprehensive TV guide for the latest listings

'Spicy' thriller tops Netflix chart after being binged for 56,900,000 hours
'Spicy' thriller tops Netflix chart after being binged for 56,900,000 hours

Metro

time2 hours ago

  • Metro

'Spicy' thriller tops Netflix chart after being binged for 56,900,000 hours

Non-English TV series are continuing to take Netflix by storm, with the latest chart-topping thriller drawing in millions of views in a matter of days. First released on July 30, Unspeakable Sins is a Spanish revenge drama about a woman who finds solace in the company of a younger man and embarks on an affair. Zuria Vega takes the lead as Helena, who conjures up a plan with a lover to escape her controlling husband, taking their troubled son with her. But she soon becomes dangerously entangled with secrets, lies, and Mexico's elite, as her act of vengeance outside her loveless marriage gets twisted into a perilous fight for survival. Other cast members include Erik Hayser, who plays powerful, abusive husband Claudio, while Andrés Baida plays Iván, who aids Helena in filing for divorce after a months-long steamy tryst. Wake up to find news on your TV shows in your inbox every morning with Metro's TV Newsletter. Sign up to our newsletter and then select your show in the link we'll send you so we can get TV news tailored to you. With 18 episodes, Unspeakable Sins promises plenty of salacious scheming, and you can be sure you're in safe hands with creator Leticia López Margalli, who's also the mastermind behind Netflix's Oscuro deseo. In the short time since its streaming debut, Unspeakable Sins has been watched for 56.9million hours in total, sending it rocketing to number one on the charts. And it's proven a hit with viewers, too, who are flooding social media with spicy reviews. X user @LoveReality9 described the series as 'addictive', already demanding a second season. 'Unspeakable Sins is extremely [spicy emojis] and addictive full of action taboo subjects full of mystery and one incredible ending of season one that will leave you with more questions! Every single time I got answers to my questions I had more questions', they wrote. '@netflix must renew it for a second season! Just WOW! This season is totally binge worthy!' 'Intense series. Loved it', added @david_clark34. Also heaping praise on the Spanish thriller, @katyanna25 posted: 'I can never get bored watching spanish shows. Almost always the same plot, but they always keep you hooked. #UnspeakableSins is one of them.' Taken aback by the show's explicit nature, @1Liasonfan wrote: 'I'm on episode 5, the sex scenes are def spicy, wow. The plot is not bad too. I can't turn away'. Others declared that the show has given them their new 'favourite villian', while many were left hot and bothered by the sexual scenes. In fact, @MelikhayaL3006 compared the show to porn, as @_Keshaye joked that things keep getting 'crazier and crazier'. And just in case all of that has still left you in need of some convincing, allow Netflix's Tudum to spill some more hints about what to expect. 'Their flirtation instantly explodes into a steamy tryst. Months later, the unlikely pair are in a relationship worth fighting for and must find a way for Helena to escape her abusive marriage to the rich and powerful Claudio (Hayser). 'When Iván suggests that he seduce Claudio, Helena's husband, on a hidden camera to give Helena enough leverage to file for an advantageous divorce, she jumps at the chance to free herself and her teenage son from Claudio's grip. 'But what starts as a seemingly foolproof plan quickly spirals out of control when Claudio can't take no for an answer, and the ensuing brawl exposes Helena and Iván's scheme. 'Helena arrives in the bloody aftermath only to find her husband missing, her lover on the run, and her son at the scene of the crime—without any memory of how he got there.' Tudum adds: 'As police flood the crime scene, Helena scrambles to cover up her and Iván's involvement and to protect her son from becoming an accidental fall guy. 'As she fends off the police, Claudio's adult children from his previous marriage, and Claudio's powerful business associates, Helena's already complicated life becomes a brutal fight for survival.' Non-English series have long been popular on the streaming platform, with season 3 of South Korean dystopian survival thriller Squid Game still flying high. More Trending Having dropped its final instalment on June 27, it's still attracting almost three million views weekly, having spent six weeks in Netflix's top 10 and charted in 60 countries. Other high-performing non-English programmes currently include South Korean action thriller Trigger, anime series My Melody & Kuromi, and South African crime thriller miniseries Marked. View More » Unspeakable Sins is available to watch on Netflix. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: British girl,11, dies after drowning in swimming pool on holiday in Spain MORE: 'I hid behind a chair': Your favourite TV thrillers that scared you stiff MORE: Cancel your weekend plans and binge this 'creepy' supernatural drama for free

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