Stacey Dooley Bio, Age, Family, Wife, School, Salary, Net Worth,BBC

Stacey Dooley the BBC journalsit

Stacey Dooley Biography

Stacey Jaclyn Dooley is an English television presenter, journalist, and media figure. She first gained national attention in 2008, when she featured on the show Blood, Sweat, and T-Shirts. She has since produced social-issue television programs for BBC Three about child labor and women in impoverished countries.

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How old is Stacey Dooley? – Age

Stacey Jaclyn Dooley was born on March 9, 1987, in Luton, Bedfordshire. She is 34 years as of 2021.

Where did Stacey Dooley go to school? – Education

She was raised in Luton and attended Stopsley High School. She dropped out of school at the age of 15 and began working as a shop assistant at Luton Airport, selling fragrances. In Bramingham, she also worked in a hairdresser’s salon.

Stacey Dooley – Family

Her father was Irish, and he abandoned the family when she was two years old. Her father was an alcoholic who died before they could reconcile when Dooley was in her twenties.

Stacey Dooley’s boyfriend

Dooley has been dating her Strictly Come Dancing dancing partner Kevin Clifton since early 2019.

Stacey Dooley the BBC journalsit
Stacey Dooley the BBC journalist

What is Stacey Dooley Salary?

Dooley’s salary is € 729,000.

Stacey Dooley Net Worth

Her net worth is $1 million.

Stacey Dooley Career

Dooley first appeared on television in April 2008 when she traveled to India as one of the participants on the documentary television series Blood, Sweat, and T-shirts. Dooley and the other participants were selected to illustrate the typical fashion-obsessed consumer. Thanks to her appearance on the show, and partly because of her interest in labor laws in developing countries, a series was commissioned with Dooley as the presenter. Stacey Dooley Investigates began in August 2009 and a two-part special was shown on BBC Three throughout August and September 2009. It also aired in Australia on ABC2 from 2 June 2010. In October 2010, BBC Three aired two further programs, the first on former child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the second on sex trafficking and underage sex slavery in Cambodia. Dooley was at an event organized by War on Want in 2009 protesting against sweatshops.                                                                                          In 2011, BBC Three aired Tourism and the Truth: Stacey Dooley Investigates. Over two episodes, Dooley investigated how tourism in Thailand and Kenya affects employees there, in particular with regard to wages, corruption, and environmental changes. Dooley also presented the CBBC series Show Me What You’re Made Of. Shot in Dooley’s native Luton, My Hometown Fanatics was broadcast on BBC Three on 20 February 2012. In the program, Dooley interviewed Islamists and the English Defence League. A three-part series titled Coming Here Soon was broadcast on BBC Three in June and July 2012, in which Dooley explored the lives of young people in three countries affected by the global financial crisis: Greece, Ireland, and Japan. The program on Japan was criticized by some because it ignored the Samaritan’s guidelines on reporting suicide. While Dooley was in the United States in 2012, she created two series of Stacey Dooley in the USA where she investigated issues affecting teens across America such as Girls Behind Bars, Border Wars, Homelessness, and Kids in the Crossfire. In 2015, Dooley created the documentary series Beaten By My Boyfriend, in which she investigated domestic abuse within the UK.                                                                                                                   In 2016, Dooley presented Stacey Dooley in Cologne: The Blame Game, about the 2015 New Year’s Eve sexual assaults in Germany, which aired on 29 January. She also presented Stacey Dooley: Hate and Pride in Orlando, where she traveled to Orlando, Florida in the aftermath of the Pulse Bar shootings. On 30 July, Dooley appeared on the BBC’s Celebrity Mastermind where her specialist subject was the television series Girls.                                                                                                              In November 2016, Dooley appeared in a BBC Three series Brainwashing Stacey, where she went to a US anti-abortion summer camp and then to some African big-game hunters. Stacey also made a documentary, Sex in Strange Places, for which she traveled to Turkey, Brazil, and Russia to explore people’s different attitudes towards sex and prostitution.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    In December 2016, Dooley was stopped by police in Tokyo while filming Young Sex For Sale In Japan, a documentary about child sexual exploitation in that country. She was held on the street for two hours by police who were investigating their confrontation with two men “protecting” some of the girls, who had called the police on the film crew. After initially being confronted by two men who demanded “no movies”, the pair tried to use physical force against the film crew to make them leave the area. The story was released a few days before the program was made available in February 2017.                                                                                                In 2017, Dooley presented CBBC’s The Pets Factor. She also presented the documentary Canada’s Lost Girls in March 2017 in which she traveled across Canada investigating the various factors which played a part in the disappearance and murder of over 1,200 Indigenous women. Dooley narrated the documentary The Natives: This Is Our America, where she investigated the lives of young Native Americans and the Dakota Access Pipeline protests. 

From 2018 to the present: television career, debut book, and Strictly Come Dancing

In April 2018, Dooley took part in a BBC show, Celebrities on the NHS Front-line, to celebrate the 70th birthday of the National Health Service. In the 2018 series of Stacey Dooley Investigates, she traveled to Russia, Florida, Iraq, and Hungary to explore more challenging issues such as child exploitation, sex offenders, war, domestic violence, pollution in the fashion industry, and coming face-to-face with an ISIS soldier for which she won a One World Media Award. The episodes of this series won the title of the Most-Watched Documentaries on BBC iPlayer.Dooley published her first book in February 2018, Stacey Dooley, On the Front Line with the Women Who Fight Back. The book has topics concerning sex trafficking, domestic violence, sex equality, and child exploitation and became a Sunday Times Bestseller. She also had her own UK book tour, hosted by Viv Groskop.                                                                                                                                                                            Dooley was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2018 Birthday Honours for services to broadcasting. In 2012, and again in 2015, Dooley was a member of the judging panel for The Observer Ethical Awards.                                                                                                                                                            On 16 August 2018, Dooley was announced as the eighth contestant to take part in the sixteenth series of Strictly Come Dancing. On 15 December 2018, she won the series with her dance partner Kevin Clifton. Following her win, shortly afterward, the BBC announced Dooley as co-presenter of New Year Live on BBC One, alongside another Strictly 2018 contestant, Joe Sugg. BBC One’s Children in Need where she explored the number of homeless young people in the UK.                     In 2019, Dooley was named as Grazia‘s new contributing editor for investigations. She appeared on The National Television Awards 2019 and presented BBC’s The Nine To Five With Stacey Dooley and The One Show. Dooley took part in 2019 Strictly Come Dancing Arena Tour throughout the UK. Dooley then began presenting the BBC Three reality competition series Glow Up: Britain’s Next Make-Up Star. In July 2019, it was announced that Dooley would be a guest judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race UK. In August 2019, she released the documentaries Stacey Meets the IS Brides and Stacey Dooley: Face to Face with the Bounty Hunters, which became the most-watched documentary on BBC IPlayer.                                                                                                                                                                                                  In 2020, Dooley appeared in Jessie Ware‘s music video for “Save a Kiss” and the game show Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel.                                                                          In 2021, Dooley, with Turi King, presented the BBC program DNA Family Secrets, which helps people solve family mysteries regarding their ancestry, missing relatives, and genetic diseases.

Controversies

Dooley was criticized in January 2019 for falsely portraying a Turkish woman as a Syrian sex worker living in Istanbul in her series Sex in Strange Places.
The misrepresentation led to the Turkey episode of the documentary being removed from BBC iPlayer.
Dooley was further criticized in February 2019 after she posted photos holding a Ugandan child on her Instagram account during a trip to Uganda organized by British charity Comic Relief.
Dooley was accused on social media of reinforcing white savior stereotypes. British MP David Lammy tweeted in response to a news story about Dooley: “The world does not need any more white saviors. As I’ve said before, this just perpetuates tired and unhelpful stereotypes.
Let’s instead promote voices from across the continent of Africa and have a serious debate.” Ugandan campaign group No White Saviours wrote on Dooley’s Instagram: “White saviors is a symptom of white supremacy and something we all have to work together to deconstruct.” Gaby Hinsliff, a columnist at The Guardian wrote: “The sight of celebrities making weepy ‘personal journeys’ towards understanding poverty has begun to feel crasser and crasser, especially where it overshadows the people whose experiences they’re meant to be understanding in the first place.”
Dooley told The Guardian she had no regrets over the incident and she would do the same again.
In June 2019, Comic Relief founder Richard Curtis told members of the British Parliament that the charity would stop sending celebrities abroad as a consequence of the controversy. In August 2019, Dooley caused controversy for calling a Muslim prayer gesture ‘an IS salute’ in a Panorama documentary on IS brides.
A BBC spokesperson confirmed that this clip had been removed from the documentary, while the teaser trailer had been edited.

Awards and honors

In the 2018 Birthday Honours, Dooley was named a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for services to broadcasting.
Stacey Dooley: Face To Face With ISIS won the Popular Features Award at the One World Media Awards in 2018.