Russell Grant

Russell John Dammerall Grant (born 1951) is an English celebrity astrologer, pet psychic[1] and pantomime actor.

Hail, floating head of money!
Putting the psycho in
Parapsychology
Men who stare at goats
By the powers of tinfoil
v - t - e
Not to be confused with an overweight Russel BrandFile:Wikipedia's W.svg.

Russel also operates a really expensive per-minute Astrology phone service, where slow talkers pay through the nose.[2]

He currently has a relatively broad online presence.[3][4][5][6][7] In 2011 he was the token joke contender on Strictly Come Dancing, though in fairness he was considerably better than Ann Widdecome and John Sergeant who had taken on the role in previous series.

Career

He started astrology by chance, as a struggling actor running the business as a side-line, until at the 1978 Ideal Home Exhibition he was visited by Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, which he parlayed into a TV appearance.[8]

His long TV career began in 1979 on YTV's Extraordinary and following that with Granada's Live from Two. He then began his association with breakfast, first on the BBC's Breakfast Time, and then ITV's TV-am. After the latter lost its franchise, he moved to This Morning with Richard and Judy where he continued babbling about stars.[9]

He had a short-lived musical career in the early 1980s, releasing "No Matter What Sign You Are" (reaching #87 in the UK charts[10]) and "Where Is Love?" In 2012 he attempted to return to the charts with "The Clapping Song".[11]

Video game

A career peak might be the making of this licensed Nintendo game about astrology for the DS. So, this is actually a thing.

<iframe src='//www.youtube.com/embed/9HXLUBb7Kno?' width='640' height='360' frameborder='0' allowfullscreen='true'></iframe>

Counties of England

Russell Grant is also an avid campaigner for the preservation of the traditional county boundaries and names of England. Westmoreland Ho![12]

Wikipedia censoring

In November of 2009, Grant decided he didn't want his Wikipedia entry to "reveal" his birthdate (clearly not for any vain reasons).[13] Russel also decided his partner needed the same mystery treatment, and proceeded to blank out his birthdate as well.[14]

Editing articles on yourself is frowned upon at Wikipedia, never mind blanking out pretty basic information about a person. Thus, his calls for these edits to stay went unheard.

gollark: Although that probably wouldn't be great because you want to protect people from attaining doublespent coins anyway.
gollark: You don't know which one was first.
gollark: But if two people get whatever you need to make the proof, you have apioforms because without a blockchain you can't timestamp them properly.
gollark: I mean, you could probably devise something where when someone gets a coin, they can publish a proof that they... got the coin.
gollark: I feel like that might just end up needing the entire blockchain thing you attempted to avoid?

References

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