A Tribute To Most Haunted
28

Feb

Yvette Fielding Interview: Most Haunted, Blue Peter and zombies

Posted by admin as Interviews, Most Haunted News

Jenny talks to Yvette Fielding about the highs and lows of Most Haunted, and her desire to play a zombie…

Once upon a time, we knew Yvette Fielding for Blue Peter, not least her infamous cooking on the show. Now? She’s front and centre of Most Haunted, and to tie in to the new DVD releases for the show, she spared us some time for a natter…

How did the American investigations compare to the British ones? Did you do anything differently?

It was just the locations that changed. There are some really good ones out there. The American jail we visited [Eastern State Penitentiary, reviewed here], the one in Pennsylvania, that was terrifying. Dark, full of atmosphere…to be in a cell where Al Capone was kept was amazing. That was one of the best. And investigating Sleepy Hollow, with all that history…but there were no differences in the actual investigations, just where they were.

Are there any American paranormal shows you particularly like or which have influenced you? Would you join up with one of their teams to work with them?

I don’t watch anybody else’s show! Everyone has different ways of doing things and we’d all just get frustrated. I’d be saying, “That’s not how we do it!” and they’d probably be saying, “She’s a bit weird”…to be honest I don’t watch TV full stop, so I don’t watch anybody else’s programmes. I hear there are some good ones but everyone works differently.

How did you cope with the seven- or eight-day-long Most Haunted Live events? Did they take their toll?

They’re frustrating. They’re just too long. You get very tired and the less energy you have, the less likely it is you’ll get something happening. Because that’s what I believe, you know, that they use our energy, and if there isn’t any there you’ll get nothing, no activity. You just end up shattered. I prefer the one-night, three-hour shows.

When they came to us on the American ones we were terrified about doing seven hours live to an American audience. We had no idea what was going to happen, if anything, but it went really quickly and we enjoyed it. 

Would you ever do an investigation in your own home? I hear you live in a haunted house!

No – although we did do a programme called Screaming Banshees for The Unexplained Channel with Cath Howe and Lesley Smith [from Most Haunted] where we took the night-vision cameras in. They kept hearing all these noises and bumps and they were jumping out of their skin. They kept asking me, “How on earth do you live here?” And I was saying, “I love it here, this is my home! Nothing’s going to harm you!”

Where’s Most Haunted off to next?

We’re planning to go to Prague – that’s exciting because of the history. Everything’s built on witchcraft, torture, murder…there are kinds of locations you’d never get in England. I’d like to go to some way-out places like Asia.

Is there a particular culture out there that you associate with, then?

No, no culture, just England. You can’t beat our history. I love being at home.

You had experience of live TV very early on in your career presenting Blue Peter. Did that help with the live shows?

The live aspect is daunting but I did eight years of it and after that long it’s in your blood – you get used to it. Obviously, we have scripted bits, like the history of the location, and people actually make more mistakes when it’s scripted, they mess up because they know they can do it again.

You know, there is no show like Most Haunted, which makes it even more nerve-wracking. Yeah, you have your scripts and your pieces to camera but the rest of it is night-vision and investigations. If nothing happens, you’re stuffed. If something does happen, everyone says you’re faking it.

You can’t win.

Right. So you get people who say, “Yes, you should sit there and analyse everything and do scientific studies,” and that’s fair enough but it wouldn’t be Most Haunted then. People don’t like quiet, they don’t watch TV for that, it’s frustrating for some people. They want to see us doing things and stuff happening. But then when something does actually kick off, you get people saying that it’s faked and silly and complaining about that. You can’t please everyone.

I’d understand if you don’t want to answer this next question, but recently it’s been in the news that some people got together on the Internet and allegedly threatened some really nasty things against you. How have you dealt with it?

Well, my husband tries to keep it all away from me, but we’ve upped the security – we’ve had people trying to get in and that was really scary. I can’t be alone in the house any more. It’s what you get with the Internet, it’s dangerous.

In the early days I used to visit all the forums and fan sites to see what the fans wanted – you got criticism but it came with ideas, like, “This is what we don’t like but here’s how to make it better, here’s what you could do.” Then I stopped for a while, but recently I’ve been visiting the forums again and it’s all abuse and it’s so upsetting. I’m not going to bother if all they have to say is horrendous, nasty, hurtful things.

After the last series I started to think, “What are people saying?” and had a look. The odd comment is positive but mostly it was just horrendous. I was close to tears and just said, “I’m never going to look again.” I honestly think some people get off on hatred.

Do you think Most Haunted will keep going? What would you like to move onto if it runs its natural course?

I hope it will keep going. I’ll keep going until people have had enough. I won’t stop the investigations, though, I love it, I’d have to keep doing those. But I would love to go back to acting, that’s where I started. I’d love to play a zombie…

That would be a Davina McCall moment!

Ha, yes, I’d play a zombie that gets murdered in the first few minutes. I bet people would love that! Or a guest actress in a drama. I’d like to do that before I’m old and crumbly.

Yvette Fielding, thank you very much!

By Jenny Sanders Published on Feb 28, 2010

Source: http://www.denofgeek.com/television/430426/yvette_fielding_interview_most_haunted_blue_peter_and_zombies.html

10

Jan

David Wells Interview

Posted by admin as Interviews, You Tube

Interview with David Wells talking about Qabala and Astrology published by Hay House

15

Nov

Yvette Fielding – The Wright Stuff (15th Nov 2009)

Posted by admin as Interviews, You Tube

Yvette Fielding appeared on the show to promote Most Haunted Live and the new DVD, Most Haunted Series 11

21

May

Yvette Fielding On The Paul O’Grady Show

Posted by admin as Interviews, You Tube

06

Sep

Yvette Fielding On The Creation Of Most Haunted

Posted by admin as Interviews, You Tube

Yvette Talks About: “How Most Haunted Was Created?” “Were Was The Most Frightining Most Haunted Location?” “Were Else Do You Think Most Haunted Will Investigate?” “What Makes A Good Medium?” …

18

Feb

Exclusive Yvette Fielding Interview

Posted by admin as Interviews

Yvette Fielding is no stranger to things that go bump in the night as the presenter, co-producer and seasoned ghost hunter on Most Haunted she’s explored some of the spookiest locations around. Yvette took time from filming the scariest series yet to chat to Female First about ghosts, psychic artists, ouija boards and why Billy Connoly should be Prime Minister.

How is filming going for series 10 of Most Haunted?
We’ve done about 6 shows out of 10 and we’re on our way to do another shoot now. We’re on our way to South Wales where we’re going to be doing haunted woods and a haunted beach and some haunted world war two bunkers which are all in the same area. And we’re camping out in tents- at the this time of the year for god’s sake!

What can we expect from the new series?
There’s going to be some new faces. We’ve got some new mediums- Brian Sheperd who is a fantastic medium and psychic artist which is really quite scary because he actually draws the ghosts faces and some of them are quite terrifying. Then we have Barrie John who is a very softly spoken medium and Johnny Fiori We’ve also got Lesley Smith who is a historian who you usually see in the live studio but we’ve brought her into the series. Now she’s wandering round at night scaring herself to death, screaming a lot which is very very funny. I shouldn’t say that but it is very funny to watch.

There’s also another Most Haunted Live coming in March, where’s that going to be from?
It’s in Turin in Italy and we’re doing it in the City of Satan so it’s all to do with the dark side. It’s going to be very frightening. We’ve got five live nights coming from Italy and we’re going to five frightening locations. We’ll be taking Brain Sheperd on location doing his psychic art as we go through the most awful places. It’s going to be very frightening and very interesting.

The show is in it’s 10th series now, why do you think it’s stuck around so long?
I think it’s just because it’s just ordinary people going out and trying to catch paranormal activity. When we first started the series there we a few ghost groups where people would go out and do this as a hobby but now there are hundreds and hundreds of groups all around the country, in Europe and across in America doing this. I think it’s because Most Haunted made ghost hunting something that was accessible and that people could do. It’s not expensive to do. You need a night vision camera – not even that. You can just go with a torch, a piece of paper and a digital camera and ghost hunt and I think that’s what made people watch it.

And the fact that the crew are normal people- they’re not celebrities. You’ve got Cath who’s a make up artist and runs a hair salon in Hazel Grove- she’s a normal down to earth lady. Then we’ve got the camera crew and the sound man and the director all doing it too. I think that’s probably the secret of it.

Did you believe in ghosts before you started the show?
Yes I did. I would never watch the Exorcist or any horror movies and I still won’t now. Yeah I did believe in it.

Where was the scariest location you’ve been to?
I couldn’t name one. There’s been so many now. We’ve had some great ones though. I’ve had objects thrown at me, I’ve seen people being scratched and left with scars, I’ve seen tables being lifted up and thrown against walls, I’ve heard voices- things that would give people nightmares for a long time. And I have even had nightmares at home. Yes it has been very frightening but there’s not one place I could choose.

Does anything spooky ever happen off-camera?
O god loads. It’s really frustrating because the first thing we’ll say is ‘did you get it on camera?’ and there will be like ‘no we didn’t have the camera’. So yes it is frustrating. You can just be going to the toilet and see something. Me and Cath go to the toilet- because we never go on our own us girls- and all sorts of things happen, you hear noises and then we’ll run out screaming.

You also do Ghost Hunting with celebrities, who has been your favourite celeb so far?
So far there’s been loads- we’re just about to take Paul O’Grady to Italy with his friends. We’re taking him to Sicily so that’s going to be very exciting. We’ve just finished filming with the Happy Mondays which was an experience in it’s itself- one which I will never forget and they will never forget. It is a classic and you’ve got to watch it. I urge you to get a bottle of wine and sit down and watch that. You will laugh your backside off from start to finish. It is hysterical.

Is there anyone you would really like to take ghost hunting with you?
Billy Connoly and his wife Pamela. She’s a psychologist and he doesn’t believe in any of it. I think the man should run for Prime Minister because I just love him and think he’s very funny but he doesn’t believe in ghosts and I want to prove to him that there is something out there.

A few years ago there were a few reports about the show being a fake, how did you deal with that?
In my heart of hearts I know it’s not a fake and when people said that it was upsetting and it did hurt but myself and Karl just kept our heads down and said we’ve just got to keep going. If they don’t believe us they don’t believe us. The sceptics will never believe. Even if we caught that ghost on camera they would say somehow we’d done it ourselves. Come on, if we were going to fake it we’d do a lot better than a few bangs and a few knocks. We’d have smoke coming under the doors and all sorts of things happening.

Apparently there’s some video of me on You Tube pushing a table or something which is absolute rot and not true at all. I always always say any journalists who want to come along on an investigation, bring any cameras with them or record anything then they can and I’ll prove to them that we don’t fake it. That’s the absolute truth and I think that’s helped as well because journalists think- well you can’t get fairer than that. I’m inviting them to come along and disprove it. The Guardian came along on one and they were absolutely scared to death.

Well we’ll keep going and keep going probably until the day I die and then somebody will take over a show like this and my spirit will come over and contact them via the ouija board.
Most Haunted will be back on Living Tuesdays at 9pm from Febraury 19th
Caz Moss- Female First

Source: http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/entertainment/Yvette+Fielding-48291.html

17

Feb

Yvette Fielding

Posted by admin as Interviews

Yvette Fielding

 Millions of viewers have joined Yvette Fielding in search of the supernatural since she became TV’s ghost hunter in chief. Eight years and nine series on, is the Most Haunted star slowing down? Far from it, she tells Digital Spy. When Most Haunted’s tenth outing is finished she’ll be taking Paul O’Grady to Rome and preparing for her first film role, along with more of the traditional hanging about in darkened rooms.

How is the new series going?
“It’s going well. I’ve just had my hair cut, it’s all blonde and sticking up like a punk rocker. Now we’re in the car on the way to do some camping in the haunted woods – a bit of Blair Witching.”

Have there been any highlights so far?
“We’ve done two shows at Morecambe Winter Gardens, which used to be a massive variety theatre. It’s all derelict and run down now and there’s a massive basement underneath it. Apparently there’s a good side and a bad side to the ghosts, [so] we decided to do the nice ghosts on the first night, as you do. On both nights there was lot of screaming and a lot of tears and hysteria so it will be a very good show. After the first night I thought, ‘If this is the good side, what’s the evil side going to be like?!’”

Ten series is pretty impressive and Most Haunted is Living’s top performing show – what gets people watching?
“I think for me it’s because you’ve got the camera crew, make-up artist… take out me and the experts and you’ve got all those people that are doing a normal job and you are giving them a camera and you’re sending them into the most horrendous places. When people watch it they think, ‘That could be me, I could do that.’ When we started eight years ago there were hardly any ghost groups. Now there are hundreds and hundreds. We have made it something that’s accessible, that you could go out and do. It became a hobby and they really enjoy it.”

Do you have to change things much?
“I think so. It’s really good to change mediums – I think that’s very important so that you keep things fresh. If you’re a medium, seeing dead people all the time and going into castles and stately homes, there’s always a lady in white, it’s very hard to make that interesting for people at home. It’s good for us to rotate. We’ve used three mediums (during series ten) and we’re going to be using more. We’ll always keep trying different things. The historian who was in studio is now on location. She can speak in old English. When we’re sat around the ouija board, who is to say a ghost would have used the same language we use today? It’s like having another tool with us. And she’s another screamer which also helps!”

Are you a big screamer?
“I’ve kind of calmed down with the screaming now – I’m more of a bossy cow! I’m mostly saying, ‘Shut up and calm down.’”

You run the show with your cameraman husband Karl Beattie – does that help?
“My husband and also my cousin works on it. It is important. People say, ‘How do you cope?,’ but our relationship has become even stronger. I couldn’t imagine my life working without him.”

Is there anything particular planned for the future?
“I’m due to fly out next week to do Ghost Hunting With… for ITV. I’m taking Paul O’Grady and his friends out to Italy. I had nightmares about it last night actually. I’ve got to be very bossy and evil for this one and I keep thinking about the location. We’re going to be working as a team and we’re going to concoct evil ideas about what we can do with his friends. We’re going to carry on and get our black haunted taxi in the most bizarre places. I want to do one in Egypt – I want to see the taxi coming over the dunes. We’ve got other projects going too. I’ve been asked to do a film which I’m very excited about. It’s a horror but I can’t say any more at the moment. I’m very flattered but I’m going to have to go to acting classes!”

By Dave West, Media Correspondent

Source: http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/a89393/yvette-fielding.html

23

Feb

Most Haunted’s Yvette Fielding

Posted by admin as Interviews

Friday, February 23 2007, 14:19 GMT
By Miriam Zendle, Music Reporter

Most Haunted's Yvette Fielding 

This weekend Most Haunted goes live once again. But this time it’s an extra special paranormal investigation – the team are heading to Transylvania in search of Vlad the Impaler.

Head of the ghost hunting squad Yvette Fielding explains what’s in store in one of the most notorious spiritual hotspots – and tells all about working on the show.

Could you tell us a little about the upcoming Most Haunted Live Special?
“For the first time ever we’re going to do a live show abroad. We’ve decided to go to Transylvania and we’re going to spend three nights live in one of the castles that is associated with Vlad the Impaler. There’s an immense history behind this vast castle, it’s huge, there’s various hauntings which have been witnessed there, it’s a very frightening place, as I say it’s in the mountains – the weather is very, very cold there and we’re taking the whole team with us. We don’t have an audience with us, there’s no live audience, so it makes it even more special, because it’s an even smaller team alone in the mountains in a haunted castle in Transylvania.”

How have your opinions changed since you started doing the show?
“My opinions really haven’t changed that much, but many things have happened to me and the crew that I can’t explain. I definitely know there’s something out there, but as I’ve always said, what that is we don’t know. Whether there’s a scientific explanation for it, whether dead people are really trying to communicate with us, I don’t know. It will probably be many years before we do know.”

Has there been any particular event you’ve experienced that has made you wonder whether there really is an afterlife?
“There’s been many. I heard laughing in my ear, a man laughing in my ear, that we actually caught on my radio mike…there’s definitely something out there. Furniture moved in front of my eyes, I’ve seen things, I’ve been touched, I’ve heard things. But scientists can’t explain [it]. That’s what makes me think – and I don’t care what anyone has said – there’s definitely something out there. Definitely something out there, and for any scientist to turn round and say ‘there’s no such thing as ghosts’, I just think ‘well, how naive you are, because they’ve not experienced the things I’ve experienced’. Let’s call them ghosts, but what are ghosts, we don’t know.”

With hindsight, did you ever have any ghostly experiences on the Blue Peter set? Were there any stories circulating around Television Centre?
“No! Only that George the tortoise had a little bit of a bladder problem. That’s the scariest thing that ever occurred. Not one scary thing, like I say. George did take the biscuit – I think on my first day on Blue Peter he weed all over me…that was it, really!”

Do you think you might get a good Most Haunted if you went to the Blue Peter set?
“I don’t think you would get anything there, what would we get there? You only go to places where people have reported phenomena. We went to the Coronation Street set because the crew and camera crew and actors were reporting seeing things, seeing spooks. As far as my knowledge goes, everybody seems very happy at Blue Peter!”

Do you have a wishlist of places you’d like to investigate, and if so, what’s on it?
“Oh god, there’s loads. Loads of places around the world I’d love to go – Egypt, I’d love to do a seance in the tombs of Egypt, that’d be really frightening. I’d also love to investigate Hampton Court Palace, and of course the Tower of London. We’ve never been allowed to do it, but I’d love to do that. It would make a dream come true.”

Almost there! Your clueword can be found in a review of the Nokia E61 handset

In terms of fan reaction, do you ever check fan forums to see what people are saying about you? Do you get good feedback?
“I look at the Living TV forum a lot. There’s an awful lot – there are comments on there that are quite hurtful, but they’re also very positive. Fans of Most Haunted love the show, they’ve got lovely positive things to say – they’ll suggest things, and I have actually read them, taken on board what they’ve said, and Carl and I will do our very best to implement them into the show. A lot of the time I read some of the things and they’ll say ‘Yvette’s trying to look all gothic’ or ‘Yvette looks weird, Yvette looks fat’ or this that and the other. You think ‘enough, enough, okay, okay, so you don’t like me!’ I choose not to read those ones, because otherwise you get very depressed.”

There’s always someone who’s rude!
“Oh, absolutely, and [though there are] people that love the show, you always, always, always have your sceptics. You think – I think we will have done a brilliant investigation when we’ve got stone throwing phenomena, we’ve got rappings and banging and it’s never good enough. It’s never, ever good enough. It’s fake or it’s not right, or ‘how come they get this phenomena and I’ve been ghost hunting for twenty odd years and I’ve never got that’…I don’t have an answer for them. I think sometimes if we did get a full ghost manifestation caught on camera and it was 100% real, they would all think it was fake, the sceptics, it was computer-generated or something. You can’t win with the sceptics. They will never, ever believe. The believers are brilliant, they’re our true, true fans and they’re the people who keep Most Haunted going.”

How do you think the show has changed since Derek’s departure?
“The show has gone from strength to strength, the viewing figures speak for themselves. We’ve done brilliantly well, I think we’ve moved in a new direction. I think David Wells is just the best medium I’ve ever worked with. We all get on really very well as a team and we’re all happy.”

Have you ever seen programmes like Dead Famous, and what do you think of those?
“I have! I think they’re brilliant. I think Dead Famous is a brilliant idea, a great show. It’s quite interesting, because Gail suffers from stress alopecia, and so does Stuart, who had an incident with a supposed ghost – he was thrown to the floor and was screaming, and the following week he got alopecia and his hair has never grown back since then. Very strange. So it could be paranormal, I don’t know. It just seemed very strange – I was like ‘oh my god’ when that happened to Gail, I was like ‘flipping heck’. But it’s a really great show, a really good show, and I really enjoy watching it when I can.”

Do you yourself manage to catch much TV?
“I choose not to, really. There’s so many adverts now I can’t bear it. You get into watching something and then suddenly the adverts are on for about seven minutes, it’s like ‘oh, for god’s sake’. I’m not a very good spokesperson for watching TV, I’m afraid, cos everything always seems to come out on DVD and I can watch it at my own leisure. Normally in bed with a hot chocolate – how sad am I! At the moment, I’m watching the second series of Desperate Housewives, one after the other. Brilliant.”

30

Oct

60 SECONDS: Yvette Fielding

Posted by admin as Interviews

yvette fielding

Yvette Fielding is the 38-year-old presenter of Living TV’s spookfest, Most Haunted. In the show, Yvette and a team of paranormal investigators spend 24 hours in supposedly haunted locations to try to prove or disprove the existence of ghosts. The show’s resident psychic, Derek Acorah, was replaced last year by former Metro astrologer David Wells.

Oi, you poached our astrologer.

Did we?

Well, he won’t write for us now.

I’m really sorry. We didn’t mean to nick him. We just saw this fabulous talent. He’s bloody amazing. He’s the best medium I have ever worked with. He makes you realise just how bad fake ones are.

Why do you never do anywhere that has no obvious spooky history that can be researched by the mediums?

Down the line, we want to be able to make a programme where we take haunted locations but have one that is not haunted and see if the mediums can work out which is which. We know it’s a stick that people beat us with, that the medium could know the history of a place.

Why are mediums often camp?

Most tend to be either women or camp men. Perhaps it’s something to do with sensitivity. I have never come across the Mr T version of a medium, that’s for sure. Can you imagine Mr T talking to his spirit guide? [Adopts Mr T voice]: ‘No fool. I can’t hear what you’re saying. I don’t believe in no ghosts.’

After eight series of the show, do you now believe in ghosts?

I’m now leaning towards their existence. In the series on TV at the moment, we caught something on camera no one can explain. We did a show on two ships moored in Dundee harbour. On one, we have caught on camera a rope bending as though someone was putting pressure on it. We’ve also had increases in activity. We seem to be seeing more objects thrown at us and more instances of poltergeist activity. I’m not saying I believe 100 per cent in ghosts but the rope has pushed me closer to believing.

Why do you think you are witnessing more phenomena?

Because we’ve had the same group of people working on the show for a long time. Some will say it’s because we create psychokinetic energy as a group. But if you look at successful spiritualist circles, they also have the same group of people meeting week in, week out and they claim the closer a group is, the more phenomena you will get.

Sceptics would say that eight series in, with no conclusive proof, you must be more inclined to fake results.

People have said we fake it from the first series. All I will say is, if you don’t believe us, come to see how we work.

The rest of the crew are becoming celebs in their own right. Have any acquired an ego?

Not yet. There’s a really lovely atmosphere. The team is great and most of them are moving from around the country to Manchester so we all live closer.

So why did Derek really leave?

Unbeknown to us, Ciaran O’Keeffe [the show’s resident sceptic] had suspicions about Derek and decided to plant some information to see if it would be repeated. He left a piece of paper around with the name ‘Kreed Kafer’ on it and said, within earshot of Derek, that he was a nasty South African jailor. When we started filming, Derek decided to get possessed by this fake person. The name is actually an anagram of Derek Faker. We tell people everything is real, then it turns out he was a fake, so he had to go.

Did you feel let down?

I was more angry than anything. I was upset that someone we considered to be close could do that. And then we had the possessions but we were getting three every show and, in every one, Derek would have the same voice. He’d also attack the crew members when he was supposedly possessed so it could have got dangerous for us.

Where does that leave the show’s credibility?

Where does it all stop? Are these mediums that do theatre shows all set up as well? You get little old ladies who pay £20 or £30 to see a theatre medium and you have to ask – are they being duped? Ciaran and I are trying to work out a system where mediums and ghost groups could be policed.

Last time we interviewed you, you said your make-up lady, Cath, had once been so scared, she wet herself. Has she learned to control her bodily functions?

No, she’s got worse. She’s not literally sh**ting herself but the more she experiences, the more scared she gets.

Most Haunted, Series 6, Volume 3, is out on DVD now.

You get little old ladies who pay £20 to see a theatre medium and you have to ask – are they being duped?

What do you think of the copycat programmes?

I’m not impressed with them, to be honest. So far, I’ve seen nothing on them that makes me think: ‘Oh, my God.’ They are making television programmes, though; we are not. We are more interested in investigating the paranormal. Ciaran and I have written a book together called Ghost Hunters – plug, plug, it’s on the shelves now. We are now writing a second book. We have taken it to the next step. I have genuinely become so passionate about this and finding some proof of paranormal existence, one way or another. When Karl [Yvette’s husband], Ciaran and myself meet, we spend all the time talking about our next experiment and how to go about it. People must think we are total nerds.

How do you recommend the public go about doing their own ghost hunts?

They should join a ghost club or group and make sure it is a reputable one that has some kind of history. What you should not do is just find the club closest to your house and go with them for sake of proximity. Just as there are an awful lot of fake mediums out there, there are also fake ghost clubs. Do a bit of research, find a good one and go with them. But do not just go on your own. You need to go with someone who knows what they are talking about.

By James Ellis

Source: http://www.metro.co.uk/showbiz/interviews/23243-60-seconds-yvette-fielding