The Mail on Sunday

Will BBC chiefs get nasty and diff icult over Stacey’s Nice ’n’ Easy cash?

Strictly star faces showdown over Clairol advertisin­g deal

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

SHE is one of the BBC’s most prized stars, fronting a string of documentar­ies on major social issues and winning Strictly Come Dancing.

But now Stacey Dooley faces a showdown with Corporatio­n bosses after signing a lucrative deal to advertise haircare products that one inside called a ‘head-on conflict of interest’.

The 33-year-old journalist, who also presents BBC Three reality show Glow Up: Britain’s Next Make- Up Star, was l ast week unveiled as ‘the face’ of Clairol’s Nice ‘n Easy hair colourings.

But her decision to sign a deal with the US giant has been criticised by BBC staff who claim it jeopardise­s Corporatio­n independen­ce.

Guidelines require all programme makers and presenters to declare ‘any personal interests which may affect their work with the BBC’. It was unclear last night whether Dooley – who won Strictly in 2018 and is now dating her profession­al dance partner Kevin Clifton – had told BBC management about her Clairol contract before i t was announced by the company.

One veteran programme-maker, said he would be surprised if broadcasti­ng chiefs had approved Dooley’s deal, saying it could prove ‘difficult for the BBC’.

And a BBC journalist said: ‘It should be forbidden for anyone in news and current affairs to do commercial work like this. If someone asked me to advertise anything, it would be a “no”.

A Corporatio­n s p o k e s ma n declined to be drawn on whether Dooley had consulted managers about her plans, but said of the commercial tie-up: ‘We will be discussing any implicatio­ns with her.’

Dooley has already made a 20-second commercial, which launched on TV and online last week. In a statement announcing her appointmen­t as a brand ambassador, the star said Clairol ‘has championed women for decades’ by allowing them to ‘take control of their own colour and to be true to themselves’.

The BBC does not have a blanket ban on staff doing commercial­s and has looser restrictio­ns on freelancer­s who only make occasional programmes for them.

But rules are tougher for staff in news and current affairs and contracted stars whose work is primarily with the BBC.

Dooley’s employment status is not known, but she has been awarded an MBE for presenting dozens of investigat­ive BBC documentar­ies on subjects such as sex traffickin­g, domestic violence and suicide bombers.

Last year she presented an edition of Panorama about Islamic State brides and next month she is due to present another edition of the BBC1’s flagship current affairs programme about babies born in lockdown.

Her work on Glow Up, a contest for amateur make-up artists, might also prove problemati­c, as it covers an industry in which Clairol and its parent company Coty Inc are leading players. Representa­tives for Ms Dooley did not respond to requests for comment.

‘People in her role should be banned from doing ads’

 ??  ?? A DEAL TO DYE FOR: Film-maker Stacey Dooley has already released a commercial for the hair colouring and praised Clairol for ‘championin­g women’
A DEAL TO DYE FOR: Film-maker Stacey Dooley has already released a commercial for the hair colouring and praised Clairol for ‘championin­g women’
 ??  ?? GLAMOUR: Dooley also hosts a make-up show
GLAMOUR: Dooley also hosts a make-up show

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