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Gino D'Acampo's ITV shows removed from schedule

Gino D'Acampo's ITV shows removed from schedule

Yahoo07-02-2025

Gino D'Acampo's upcoming shows have been removed from ITV's schedule, after the celebrity chef was accused of inappropriate and intimidating behaviour on set.
Friday night's ITV2 episode of Family Fortunes has been replaced by Wheel of Fortune, an ITV spokesperson told BBC News, adding that Sunday's two episodes of Secrets of the South, are no longer in the ITVBe schedule.
On Thursday, ITV News published an investigation which said it had spoken to "dozens" of people who accused him of "unacceptable", "distressing" and "horrendous" comments.
In a statement to ITV News via his legal team, D'Acampo "firmly denied" the "deeply upsetting" allegations.
BBC News has approached D'Acampo's representative for comment.
D'Acampo, 48, has been a regular on UK television since the early 2000s. He has primarily worked for ITV, including on a number of cooking and travel shows, as well as making appearances on other entertainment programmes.
The Italian-born chef and broadcaster has also made appearances on BBC programmes.
It is understood that there are now no repeats featuring D'Acampo in ITV's linear schedule.
However, some of his programmes are still available on ITVX, the broadcaster's streaming service.
A new series of Family Fortunes, filmed in October, hasn't been broadcast yet, and it's understood there are currently no plans to air it.
TV chef Gino D'Acampo denies inappropriate behaviour claims
ITV News published a number of allegations from anonymous accusers who said they had worked with D'Acampo on TV productions. BBC News has not spoken to his accusers nor has it verified their claims.
They accused him of aggressive behaviour, using abusive language during outbursts on set and using sexualised language.
His behaviour allegedly left some production staff fearful and uncomfortable, ITV News reported.
It added that most people it spoke to were freelancers and had been too scared to complain at the time for fear of risking future employment.
Responding to the investigation, D'Acampo's representatives told ITV News that he "firmly denied" the claims. He said he had "never been made aware of these matters previously".
A statement continued: "I am a father, husband and have worked with well over 1,500 people on around 80 productions in my career, which I have been so proud of.
"I take such matters extremely seriously," he said, adding that the suggestion that he acted in an improper way was "deeply upsetting".
In a statement, ITV said production companies "have the primary responsibility for the duty of care of everyone they work with".
The broadcaster said it had "strengthened" policies about what standards they expect from production companies it works with in the last five years.
A statement continued: "All of the concerns and complaints raised by those who have spoken to ITN [the producer of ITV News] describe behaviour which is inappropriate and unacceptable.
"Most of them were not reported to ITV at the time. Where issues have been raised with ITV action has been taken."

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Lori Vallow Daybell: What to know about 'Doomsday Mom' and her convictions
Lori Vallow Daybell: What to know about 'Doomsday Mom' and her convictions

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Lori Vallow Daybell: What to know about 'Doomsday Mom' and her convictions

Lori Vallow Daybell now faces sentencing in two Arizona convictions after a jury found her guilty of conspiring to murder her niece's ex-husband, Brandon Boudreaux. The two convictions capped a series of tangled conspiracies, apocalyptic beliefs and family murders that unfolded in 2019 and led to trials in two states. The Arizona trials were marked by drama both in front of the jury and behind the scenes. As her own attorney, Daybell filed several motions to have her convictions thrown out and have multiple judges disqualified. She also repeatedly clashed with the judges and prosecutors. But she insisted to the jury in her second trial in Arizona that she was a loving person without anger, telling them: 'I am a person who loves all people and has no malice toward people, not even the prosecutors.' Born in 1973 in Southern California into a large Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints family, Daybell eventually would live in three different states and marry five different men by the time she was 46. Her first four marriages would last about three years each. Daybell married her first husband, Nelson Yanes, when she was 19, according to reporting by East Idaho News. After their brief marriage ended, she married William Lagioia in 1995, with whom she had a son, Colby Ryan. The two were separated by 1998. In 2001 she married Joseph Ryan and had her second child, Tylee Ryan. The two lived in Texas, where she had a career as a hairdresser and competed as a beauty queen. She also appeared on 'Wheel of Fortune,' winning about $17,500 in cash and prizes. Her marraige with Ryan lasted until 2004. He died of a heart attack in 2018. In 2006 Lori Daybell married Charles Vallow in Las Vegas. The family lived in Texas for several years before relocating to Hawaii in 2014 and ran a juice business. The family moved again in 2016, this time to Arizona, where Charles worked as a life insurance agent. Two years into their life in Arizona, Lori Daybell met Chad Daybell at e religious conference in St. George, Utah, for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who focused on apocalyptic beliefs. Chad Daybell was a self-published author who wrote fiction centered on end-times prophecy. Aspects of her life and the murders have been covered in two streaming movies since 2021. The Lifetime movie "Doomsday Mom: The Lori Vallow Story," which stars Lauren Lee Smith as Lori Daybell, focuses on the disappearance of her children, Tylee and Joshua 'J.J.', and the events leading up to the charges against her. A Netflix documentary titled "Sins of Our Mother," released in 2022, explored her radical beliefs, the deaths of her children, and includes interviews with her surviving son, Colby Ryan. Both series covered the ins-and-outs of what would be the saga that continues in 2025. The truth behind Daybell's murders began to unfold almost 900 miles away in Rexburg, Idaho, where the bodies of her two children — 7-year-old Joshua 'J.J.' Vallow and 16-year-old Tylee Ryan— were found buried in 2020. For months, family and friends had searched for the children, who were reported missing in September 2019. Daybell had recently moved to Idaho to be with Chad Daybell. Idaho prosecutors claimed the couple justified the murders as a spiritual mission, eliminating anyone who stood in their way of building a new life together, including Chad Daybell's former wife, Tammy Daybell. According to testimony and evidence, the couple described the children and other relatives as 'zombies.' 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While there is no order prohibiting the two from communicating with each other, communications between prisons in most jurisdictions are prohibited. After the Idaho cases, two other charges still loomed over Daybell in Arizona. She was her own attorney in these 2025 cases. Her former husband, Charles Vallow, had died after being shot by Daybell's older brother, Alex Cox, in July 2019, months after Vallow had filed for divorce. Cox told Chandler police he shot in self-defense, but an investigation that spanned almost two years showed Cox and Daybell strategized to lure Vallow to her home and provoke a fight. Cox never testified in court. He died in December 2019 from an embolism. Daybell portrayed the shooting as a family tragedy that prosecutors had turned into something more. Prosecutors said Daybell told acquaintances that Vallow was being controlled by an evil spirit and claimed to have been drugging him. Daybell attempted to collect Vallow's life insurance policy but was unsuccessful after learning he had changed the beneficiary to his sister, Kay Woodcock. A jury convicted Daybell of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder on April 22. After the conviction, Woodcock said, 'I'm glad this is done. Now we just have to get justice for Brandon.' A little over a month later, Daybell would face Boudreaux in court. Daybell characterized the attempted murder charges as a vendetta by Boudreaux, claiming that he blamed her for the collapse of his marriage to her niece Melani Pawlowski. About a month before Charles Vallow's death, Boudreaux texted Daybell and her then-husband, saying she was feeding Pawlowski lies that led to their divorce. After Cox killed Vallow and the children went missing, Boudreaux grew suspicious. Pawlowski had rented an apartment in the same Idaho complex where Daybell lived. Now separated, Boudreaux had rented a home in Gilbert, Arizona. One week after moving in, someone shot at him from the back of a Jeep Wrangler parked outside his driveway. 'So as I let the car kind of coast in, that back window pops up, I see a muzzle, I hear a bang — and your fight or flight kicks in at that point,' he testified. He immediately pointed investigators to Daybell and Cox. Prosecutors tied the Jeep to Daybell. Cell phone data later revealed Cox drove from Idaho to Arizona two days before the shooting. Records also showed Daybell called herself from Cox's phone in Idaho about an hour before the shot was fired in an effort to create an alibi for Cox, prosecutors argued. The trial lasted five days. Jurors found Daybell guilty on the sixth day after about 30 minutes of deliberation. As her own attorney, Daybell struggled to keep up with her cases. She consistently missed deadlines for disclosing reports and witnesses, while Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Justin Beresky worked to give her enough time to prepare. 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Pianist Robi Botos on Oscar Peterson's enduring legacy as centennial tour continues

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  • Hamilton Spectator

Pianist Robi Botos on Oscar Peterson's enduring legacy as centennial tour continues

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Def Leppard guitarist Vivian Campbell reveals he's in remission from Hodgkin lymphoma — 12 years after diagnosis
Def Leppard guitarist Vivian Campbell reveals he's in remission from Hodgkin lymphoma — 12 years after diagnosis

New York Post

time18 hours ago

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Def Leppard guitarist Vivian Campbell reveals he's in remission from Hodgkin lymphoma — 12 years after diagnosis

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