Monthly Archives: March 2010

FF Client Is Walking Tall

A First Features client appears in the Daily Mirror today after proving doctors wrong by teaching herself to walk and talk again at the age of 21.

Rameeza Mehmud was left paralysed and unable to speak after she fell down the stairs at school one day when she was just 14. Doctors said she’d never live a normal life but through hard work and determination she taught herself to walk and talk from scratch.

“I never gave up hope,” says Rameeza. “Everyone told me not to bother trying – that I would cause myself more harm than good. But I knew I could do it, and I proved myself right! I wanted to share my story to give faith to other people who are diagnosed with chronic illnesses and have their fate dictated by doctors.”

Rameeza called First Features and asked us to help her get her voice heard in the national press, so we did! We were so amazed by her story, we knew other people would be too,.And sure enough, she has now appeared in the Daily Mirror, reaching hundreds of thousands of people across the country and we have also secured her a magazine deal.

“Seeing myself in the paper is really surreal,” she says. “But it’s such a great experience. I feel proud of my achievements and happy to be able to inspire others. If there’s one other person who decides not to give up hope because of my story, that means the world to me.”

Ordinary people do extraordinary things every day, and here at First Features, we want to get them the recognition they deserve. So if you or someone you know has achieved something spectacular like Rameeza, please get in touch.

You can call us on 020 7703 8000 or email info@firstfeatures for more information.

First Features Exclusive in The Sun

A First Features exclusive appears in The Sun newspaper today after someone from Stowe School called us about an attempted poisoning in the pupils’ canteen.

We broke the story after a member of staff at the prestigious public school was arrested when a ‘strange smell’ was noticed coming from the tomato soup! Thankfully, other staff members stopped the food from being served, saving the 650 pupils from being poisoned.

A source from the school acted quickly by calling First Features after the news was broken to pupils and staff and within an hour we’d secured them a deal with The Sun worth hundreds of pounds.

We did all the negotiations for them, so they remained completely anonymous and the story has appeared in the paper today.

Do you have an exclusive story? Has something shocking happened at your school, place of work or even in your street? Act quickly and it could earn you some serious money!

Call First Features on 020 7703 8000 or email info@firstfeatures.co.uk for more information.

A LONG TIME COMING HOME

In this week’s issue of That’s Life! magazine, First Features client Kelly Easton tells the heart-wrenching tale of a mother who was wrongly separated from her own children.

Following a horrific accident when one of her daughters was just a few months old, Kelly was investigated by police and social services then separated from her two daughters for eight years!

But Kelly showed that a mother’s love knows no bounds and her strength and perseverance carried her through countless court hearings and meetings with the authorities until they finally admitted last year that she’d done nothing wrong and the children belonged with her.

“I was over the moon to get my girls back but I was left with the feeling that things like this are happening all over the country and I felt the need to speak out about it,” Kelly told us when she first contacted us last year.

For Kelly, telling her story wasn’t about money or fame – she wanted to highlight what she feels to be a flaw in the system, and we were able to give her the opportunity to do so by getting her tale of courage into one of the most widely read UK women’s weekly magazines.

“I wanted people to see what’s going on behind closed doors and I’ve achieved that,” she says. “Telling my story was a really emotional experience but seeing it in print feels great. I feel like I’ve given a voice to the hundreds of families up and down the country who are struggling with social services. And this is just the beginning. I’m continuing to work with First Features to raise awareness and get my story heard by as many people as possible.”

Sometimes it’s easy to feel powerless and insignificant in the face of huge institutions like the government, police force, Crown Prosecution Service, the NHS or even social services. But here at First Features we believe that everyone should have a voice. And we make it our aim to get those voices heard.

If you have had a negative, unusual, or shocking experience that you think people should be aware of, now is your chance to be heard. Pick up the phone and talk to us, and you never know – you could reach thousands of readers.

 Call us on 020 7703 8000 or email info@firstfeatures.co.uk for more information. It’s time to speak out!

TV or Not TV? That is the Question!

This week there’s been a huge amount of publicity over the upcoming Cutting Edge documentary ‘My Daughter Grew Another Head and Other True Stories’, a behind-the-scenes, fly on the wall programme about the real-life story market, including the journalists, magazines and subjects themselves. First Features was of course approached to make this programme, as were most of the other press agencies who deal with real life stories – and of course, we, like many before us, said no. It wasn’t the first time we were approached – it was about the hundredth. And every time we say the same thing – no. Why? Several very good reasons:

First, and most important, we have an obligation to our clients to maintain confidentiality. When someone approaches us with a story, they need to know we are not exposing them to any media until and unless they give us their express permission first. And even then, we will stay firmly in control of how they are portrayed, where and in which type of media. If someone called us with a very sensitive story, they would not be impressed to learn that we were sitting on the other end of the phone with a TV crew filming the conversation. We take our duties to our clients and their welfare very seriously. If we can’t protect them from the moment they contact us, how on earth can they trust us to represent them well in the future?

Secondly, we are inherently suspicious of the motives of fly-on-the-wall documentary makers. Call us cynical but we have been in the business a long time and we know that when someone wants to make a warts-and-all show about your profession, you can bet they’re going to edit the footage to bring out the warts as big and as ugly as possible. How many times have you heard former reality TV participants complain about being edited to look a certain way? A million. And why? Because the showmakers want to tell a story – whatever they decide the story might be, even if it only bears a fleeting resemblance to the truth.

Thirdly, we are not vain. We have no interest in promoting ourselves beyond the value of our stories and the interests of our clients. If our clients want to go on TV, we will of course direct them to the right place where they will get the best promotion possible. So, we’re sad to say, you won’t find us ‘starring’ in any TV show or documentary about the reality of the real-life story world. You can be assured, however, that we are discreet, down-to-earth, distinctly media-savvy, and determined to help our clients at every turn.