Aug 04 2008

Article from the Daily Mail

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 2:33 pm

Daily Mail, 4th August 2008

Hollywood stars idolise him. He’s got a mansion in LA and a TV deal worth £15m. As Paul McKenna reinvents himself as America’s self-help guru, is he a genius or a snake-oil salesman? Hollywood stars idolise him. He’s got a mansion in LA and a TV deal worth £15m. As Paul McKenna reinvents himself as America’s self-help guru, is he a genius or a snake-oil salesman?

By Nicole Lampert

FLASHY, ambitious and more than a little prone to psychobabble, it is no wonder American celebrities have taken DJ turned hypnotist turned self-help guru Paul McKenna to their hearts. Chat-show hostess Ellen DeGeneres recently cried as she described how the Londoner had convinced her to quit smoking.

And last week Courtney Love, the former drug addict and widow of Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain, credited him with helping her keep weight off after losing four stone in a dramatically short time.

‘He’s brilliant and is totally responsible for me staying so skinny,’ said the skeletal rock singer. ‘Whenever I feel my resolve weaken, I go to Paul for another hypnosis session.’

McKenna is the latest in an invasion of Brits to hit American TV screens — following in the footsteps of Simon Cowell and Anne Robinson. And he’s built his success by taking self-help back to the Americans — with bells on.

He has a two-year deal worth an estimated £15 million with America’s Discovery Network.

As well as hosting the show I Can Make You Thin (complete with accompanying books, CDs and downloads), he rakes in millions from his website, with its sales of DVDs aimed at solving everything from how to stop smoking (the box set costs £40) to how to become more confident (at a cost of £50 for four discs).

McKenna, who boasts he’s ‘the UK’s best-selling non-fiction author’ as well as being ‘a leading expert on the power of the human mind’, already has plans for a book on insomnia later this year and is about to sign a multi-millionpound deal with a U.S. publisher.

His second Discovery Network series has already been commissioned even though the first cable show attracted only 800,000 viewers.

The 44-year-old, who left school with just two O-levels and an A-level in art, was already rich before he arrived in the U.S. (when asked how rich, he liked to reply: ‘I’ve got a Ferrari’) but success in America has taken him into a whole new league.

Home now is a £3.4 million, 4,529 sq ft five-bedroom house in the Hollywood Hills, complete with a four-space detached garage, cinema room and swimming pool. His neighbours include Britney Spears, Robin Williams, Rod Stewart and Eddie Murphy.

In LA, he drives a black Range Rover Sport while in the garage at his London HQ sits his Ferrari 575, a Jeep and a Bentley Arnage.

Other luxuries include his collection of designer watches, his Brioni suits and his regular presence at the movie capital’s hottest restaurants.

Friends include not only Simon Cowell (with whom he has just holidayed in St Tropez), but the Beckhams and Paul Sculfor, the male model who dated Jennifer Aniston and is now living with Cameron Diaz.

He has thrown himself into American life, proudly showing off his buffed body, dark tan and newly-acquired transatlantic burr.

While he may still plan to spend 20 per cent of his time in the UK, he has closed down his British seminar arm, Paul McKenna Training Ltd, which last year reported a turnover of just over £3 million.

And he has even moved out to LA his ex-girlfriend Clare Staples, a former model who is now his business manager, and her dog, Mr Big.

His latest project is to make a selfhelp film which promises to enable people to fulfil all their dreams. Film financier Howard Davis says McKenna tried to interest him in the project.

‘He thinks there would be money in doing a movie,’ said Davis. ‘I wasn’t interested, but he wouldn’t let it go — he said it would make a fortune. I’ve never heard anyone talk so much bull.’ While the movie industry may not yet be impressed by McKenna, it is a different story for the American public.

His celebrity endorsements are a major draw in the fame-obsessed U.S.

– in appearances on shows such as American Idol he described how he has helped stars such as Naomi Campbell and Elle Macpherson. H IS popularity with stars has always been a useful marketing tool; the likes of Stephen Fry, Daryl Hannah, David Furnish, Chris Eubank, Sarah Ferguson, Greg Rusedski and Sophie Dahl have all publicly sanctioned him.

Ronnie Wood is another fan, although it is unlikely the hypnotist will be citing him as an example in the near future after his recent stint in rehab.

McKenna’s U.S. website is littered with testimonials from fans who say that he has saved their lives. And, with characteristic immodesty, he claims to be on a one-man campaign to save America from obesity which, ironically, he blames on diets.

‘I am on a quest to close down the hate-your-body industry,’ he declared recently. ‘The reason half the country is overweight is because we’ve been dieting for the past 40 years. It’s not just that diets don’t work: they are the problem, cynically profiteering out of other people’s misery. Diets are nothing more than training courses in how to get fat and feel like a failure.’ But while he may rail at those who peddle diet regimes, it is hard to say exactly where his advice differs.

Indeed, one Los Angeles Times writer described him as nothing better than ‘an old-style snake oil salesman constantly espousing the magical powers of television’.

Comparing McKenna’s shows to ‘infomercials’ — an advert masquerading as a factual programme — the writer Jon Caramanica continued: ‘They feature a too-perfect, toocompliant studio audience barking out answers in unison — they also have a whiff of televangelism.’ McKenna’s magic formula for losing weight is based on four golden rules. The first is to eat when hungry, the second is to eat what you want, the third is to ‘eat consciously’ — meaning chew slowly and relish every mouthful — and the final and most important part is to stop eating when you are full.

It is a simple, common-sense message that he has managed to turn into a multi-million-pound industry, although there are some who question just how revolutionary, and how effective, his techniques are.

Top nutritionist Ros Kadir says of his concept: ‘There is nothing new in what he is saying. Everybody knows that to lose weight you need to exercise more and eat less, but that is not going to stop people over-eating.

‘Even if it does work in the short term, I would love to know how many people have kept the weight off after four or five years. There is no doubt Paul McKenna knows how to make money, but he does not have the magic formula to weight loss — if he did, he would be even richer.’ Last year, Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority banned his regional advertising campaign for claiming his approach was ‘the most effective weight loss system avail- able. Lose weight and keep it off ‘.

The assertion was based on two surveys of people who had attended the hypnotist’s seminars, which showed that 71 per cent of participants had lost weight.

But the watchdog said the evidence was not strong enough to support the claim, concluding the evidence ‘ was inadequate to support the implication that all participants would lose weight and keep it off for ever’. T HAT has not prevented him repeating the claims on his websites. ‘At last, a proven way to lose weight and keep it off ,’ trumpets his British site. ‘My revolutionary weight-loss system has a proven success rate of more than 70 per cent!’ We contacted Paul McKenna for comment on these matters, but he was unavailable.

When it comes to being rich, thin and confident, McKenna is the best advert for his own advice. But as the hypnotist knows from his research, being rich and confident does not necessarily mean you are happy.

Indeed, for someone whose ethos is about people getting in touch with their emotions in order to change their lives, he appears not always to take his own advice. While for many people true happiness lies in finding a partner and starting a family, he admits he does not know if he is emotionally equipped for either.

Born the elder of two sons in

Enfield, North London, to a builder father and home economics teacher mother, he grew up a nerdy-looking dyslexic who was bullied at school and failed to excel at anything.

But a searing ambition to emulate his hero Kenny Everett saw him work his way up from working as a DJ on Topshop’s in-store radio station in its Oxford Street branch in London to joining Capital Radio.

It was while working as a DJ at Chiltern Radio that he discovered a new calling after interviewing a hypnotist for his show.

He practised on friends and then put on shows. Realising the potential, he quit his job as a DJ, leaving a note for his boss predicting he would be a millionaire by the age of 30.

Despite his many protestations since then that all he wants to do is help people — ‘if I was interested in making money, I’d be in banking or oil’ — money clearly has always been a motivating factor.

He reached his material ambition thanks to the ITV show The Hypnotic World Of Paul McKenna where volunteers were hypnotised into performing funny tasks. Viewing figures reached 13 million in 1994, and it was sold to 42 countries.

But he soon realised the freak show aspect of hypnotism could take him only so far and began to use it to help people with problems or phobias.

And after meeting Richard Bandler, the Californian founder of NLP, a form of psychotherapeutic counselling developed in the Seventies, he started to run seminars and talks..

Although he has no qualifications in therapy or nutrition, he is very proud of being a PhD — twice over.

His first qualification was from La Salle University in Louisiana, which turned out not to be accredited. He went on to get another doctorate from the International Management Centres Association, Buckingham, looking at human behaviour.

Bristling at the suggestion he was somehow a fake, he sued a newspaper for libel for claiming that he had a ‘bogus’ degree.

He was not, though, able to take action when his credibility was knocked by the Little Britain caricature of him as the creepy hypnotist who seduces women by getting them to ‘ look into my eyes, look into my eyes’. Indeed, never one to turn away a celebrity, he helped Little Britain star David Walliams to prepare for his charity swim across the Channel. C AREER-WISE, things have only gone up and up. Yet, for all his wealth, McKenna is the first to admit his life is far from perfect.

His self-confessed control freakery — every cushion in his house has to be perfectly straight and there is not a book out of place — means that he struggles to maintain relationships.

His longest romance was with Clare Staples — the pair were together for five years. But since they split more than a decade ago, his romantic history has been a long line of beautiful women who have failed to stay the course.

They have included GMTV presenter Penny Smith and model Liz Fuller. He was also rumoured to have had dalliances with Tara Palmer- Tomkinson and Caroline Aherne, while his most recent relationship was with Niki Roe, a dog trainer.

As someone who wakes up and meditates on his failings every morning, he realises he has a problem — but he seems unable to solve it. In a recent interview he resorted to psychobabble to try to explain himself — he ‘wasn’t the major shareholder’ in his own feelings and felt he needed to ‘reset the emotional thermostat’.

He admits he has never been in love with someone enough to want to spend the rest of his life with them, even though marriage is something he wishes he could have.

‘I can’t see what’s wrong with me,’ he admits. ‘It’s not as if I haven’t been brought up by good role models — my parents have had a long and happy marriage. I contrasted myself with married friends and realised they were utterly in love with one another.

They really want to be together. I’ve never felt like that with anyone.

‘I’m cold, I’ve been told. But then, I like to have as much control as possible over my emotions.’ It’s an irony that cannot be lost on Paul McKenna — as a hypnotist, he has made a fortune encouraging people to let go of their emotions to improve their lives, while his magic fails to work on himself..

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Jun 22 2008

Eyes wide shut

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 2:46 pm

James Delingpole meets a lifestyle guru who gets results

The Spectator, 21st June

The general rule when writing pieces about the multimillionaire TV hypnotist, bestselling author and self-help guru Paul McKenna is to go in deeply sceptical and to come out less so. Well I’m sorry, but I can’t be doing with any of that.

‘Paul, ‘ I say, when I walk into his swanky west London office with the chauffeur-driven silver Bentley outside. ‘I’ve got loads and loads of problems, some major, some minor, and it’s my belief you can cure them all and change my life forever.’ To his credit he isn’t fazed. A more pompous man might have said, ‘I thought this was supposed to be an interview, not a therapy session.’ McKenna, however, with his rectangular glasses, shaven pate, beady blue eyes and gravelly voice, strikes me straight away as a regular, likeable, decent bloke with no airs and graces, and a cheerful willingness to do the right thing.

‘I’m from Enfield. I don’t have any magic powers, ‘ he’s fond of saying. But I’m not sure I believe him - not when, in the space of only two hours, I’ve seen him deal so effectively first with my insomnia; then my depression; then the appalling state of affairs in which, despite being so brilliantly talented, I’m not more rich or famous.

It’s a pity I can’t tell you all his amazing techniques but there just isn’t the space and it might sound weird. But it’s OK, they’re all in his concise, easily readable, self-help books with titles l i k e I Can Make You Rich and I Can Make You Thin.

Basically, it involves using mental exercises to rid yourself of bad subconscious habits so as to get you more of the things you want in life.

You probably think these are the sort of books only poor, sad, loser types buy.

You might even nurture suspicions about McKenna because of that slightly cheesy TV hypnotism act he used to have in the 1990s.

But McKenna has long been interested in the workings of the mind. It’s just that when he started out, the only side of his career the TV commissioning people were interested in was the one where he amusingly hypnotised members of the public into acting like washing machines.

What really galvanised the self-help side of McKenna’s career was when he teamed up with American neurolinguistic programming (NLP) guru Richard Bandler. NLP is one of those slightly scary mindcontrol techniques which keen executive types learn on intensive, shouty, £1,500, seven-day courses in order to reinvent themselves as masters of the universe.

I would scoff, except it works. It dispenses with all the usual psychobabble and simply encourages you to treat your brain like a computer that needs reprogramming. In 60 minutes, you can learn to overcome difficulties which would have kept an old-school therapist busy for six months.

So, knowing all this stuff, McKenna must have turned himself into some kind of superman by now: right?

‘Not quite, ‘ he says, confessing that he ‘could do better’ on the relationship front. ‘Yeah, who’d want to settle down when you have the powers to sleep with any girl in the world?’ I suggest. But McKenna reassures me he doesn’t find it that easy to pull. His real problem, he says, is that although he’s not the unfaithful type he is desperately commitment-phobic because he’s such a self-obsessed perfectionist.

‘I’m very human and vulnerable and I don’t have all the answers. Just the answers to certain problems, like obesity, ‘ he says. And he’s on a mission to prove it. Having made all the money he needs to make - he has sold more than three million books, his NLP courses earn loads more, and he only generally gives private sessions these days to rock idols and golf superstars (’Being shallow and fame-obsessed, I like to meet cool people and ask them dumb questions’) - he now plans to heal the world.

‘There are certain things I’ve got to do, ‘ he says. ‘Through TV and digital media I want to show people that powerful, quick, easy, lasting change is possible. There’s too much fear out there, too much prejudice, too many attacking thoughts, and I want to change that.’ You might mock. I wouldn’t.

I Can Make You Rich (Bantam) is out now in paperback.

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Mar 03 2008

Paul in The Sun (UK)

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 1:27 pm

HYPNOTIST Paul McKenna has signed a three-year, £ 15million golden handcuffs deal with the US Discovery Channel.

Bosses want the Brit to be an alternative to long-standing American self-help TV host Dr Phil.

His first big project will be weight-loss show I Can Make You Thin, which will air from March.

An insider said: “Paul is massively in demand over in the US, he’s thrilled.

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Jan 27 2008

I’m off to motivate America

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 3:26 pm
I’m off to motivate America
Duncan Farmer
Mail on Sunday - 27th January

The former catwalk model Clare Staples has more than her fair share of celebrity exboyfriends, including Robbie Williams, footballer Sol Campbell and Desperate Housewives star Dougray Scott, but she has managed to remain friends with them all..

Her most enduring relationship, however, is with former fiance Paul McKenna, the television hypnotist and lifestyle guru, who has just signed a television deal in America worth a reported £23million. The pair are so close that Clare is moving to Los Angeles to be near him but nowadays their relationship, which ended in 1995, is purely platonic and professional.

‘I’m his business manager,’ says Clare, 42. ‘I have ghost-written some of his books, I produce his television shows and we make all the business decisions together. We’ve been trying and trying to crack the American market and now Paul has a three-year contract with the Discovery Channel.’

Clare has already bought a Regency-style home high in the Hollywood Hills and is selling her two-bedroom flat in Chelsea, which she bought six years ago for £535,000. Today, the flat in a converted Victorian house on Bina Gardens is on the market with Knight Frank for £1.25million. ‘I nearly didn’t buy the flat, because it was owned by A.A. Gill, the TV critic, who’d written a really nasty piece about one of Paul’s shows. I didn’t know he owned it until I came to look round it and saw a life-size photo of him in the kitchen,’ she says. ‘I thought, “Oh my God, not him!” ‘ Despite its outspoken owner and his flamboyant decor, which included lilac walls in the lounge and yellow and turquoise bathrooms as well as stuffed animals dotted around the flat, Clare fell in love with it. She and McKenna, 44, also became firm friends with Gill and his girlfriend, writer Nicola Formby, who had a flat upstairs.

‘I got rid of the lilac paint in the lounge straight away. It was too garish even for me but I’ve kept the leather floor,’ says Clare, who shared the flat with Mr Big, her Great Dane. ‘I’ve only redecorated the rest of the flat in the past year because I’ve had friends from California staying while I’ve been over there working with Paul.’ Today the colours are more muted with plenty of creams and neutral tones, the two bathrooms have slate floors and grey tiles, but elsewhere the original wooden floors and high ceilings remain.

Clare, who counts numerous celebrities including Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson among her friends, was brought up in a large house in Cobham, Surrey. She went to private school in nearby Esher, before heading to New York as an 18-year-old to launch her modelling career. ‘I go back to Cobham every time I come home,’ she says. ‘I’m very close to my sister Kate, who was Zodiac in the TV series Gladiators and had the first Gladiator baby with her costar Trojan. She’s now with the England rugby player Chris Sheasby.’ After months hopping between LA and Chelsea, Clare has decided to move to America permanently and is cashing in on Central London’s property boom. ‘In the past year house prices in that area have risen by as much as 30 per cent,’ says John Waters, a negotiator at Knight Frank’s Chelsea office.

‘It’s very popular with people who work in the City because there are good trains from Gloucester Road and South Kensington. There are good restaurants nearby and the Kings Road isn’t far away. A lot of people buy flats there as pieds-à-terre.’ Hyde Park, where Clare regularly walked her dog, is handy, too. ‘He’s over in LA now and just likes lying in the sun,’ she says. ‘But he wakes me up very early every morning when I’m there, so I get to watch the beautiful sunrise. In the evening I have a view of the twinkly lights of Hollywood below.’

Mr Big inspired Clare to write a book entitled Everything I Know About Men I Learned From My Dog, in which she says that men and dogs have a lot in common: ‘Show them any interest and they take off; ignore them and they try everything to get your attention.’ While Americans are used to watching shows such as Jerry Springer, in which experts try to help individuals, Clare believes that McKenna’s style of interactive advice will help all viewers. His diet philosophy, Think Yourself Thin, may also be a hit in a country with the highest obesity levels in the world, although Clare admits that taking self-help to the Americans is somewhat ironic.

She and McKenna were an item for five years but after they split they continued sharing the star’s home in Kensington, moving to the US in 1997 for a year. ‘We’d been working very hard for five years, touring the country doing shows, and then Paul had a show on ITV, The Hypnotic World Of Paul McKenna, which was very popular,’ she says. ‘We spent so much time working that we didn’t have time for romance. We got engaged and talked about getting married but then we realised that that wasn’t the right thing to do - there were no fights or tantrums.’

As well as doing a nationwide tour with 260 live shows in a year, the pair also tried to answer letters from fans with problems ranging from infertility to smoking, and McKenna still receives almost 200 letters a week. The pair had met when Clare was persuaded by her friend Annabel Croft, the former tennis player, to go to one of his West End shows. ‘We both ended up on stage and Paul hypnotised me,’ says Clare, who spent five years as a catwalk model in New York and appeared in TV adverts for Tropicana fruit juice, Finesse shampoo and cosmetics. ‘He convinced me that I was a PE teacher and he had me running through the theatre blowing a whistle and trying to get the audience to do sit-ups.

He also got me to believe that he was Mel Gibson.’ They met at a dinner party a few days later and shortly afterwards Clare moved into his house in Enfield. ‘We lived in New York for a year when Paul had a show on Broadway and then moved to Linden Gardens in Notting Hill,’ says Clare, who has been married once and engaged seven times. ‘I’ve only kept three of the rings and Paul’s is my favourite.’ Clare has had her share of heartache, including last year’s split from Robbie Williams and a fling with Sol Campbell, whose ex, Kelly Hoppen, is a close friend, but McKenna always cheers her up. ‘It’s like having your own personal therapist,’ she says. ‘He is always trying out new techniques on me..’ She and Mr Big will miss the Chelsea flat, which is not only handy for the parks but also has great restaurants nearby. It has another attraction for young single girls, says Clare. ‘There’s an Italian prince living upstairs - he’s single and he’s very handsome.’

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Jan 22 2008

Healing sick minds

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 12:09 pm

Healing sick minds
Celia Walden
The Telegraph - 22nd January 2008

Britain’s most famous hypnotist has declared war on the diet industry. Celia Walden meets Paul McKenna

‘I believe I can cure most psychological problems,” Paul McKenna announces calmly from the plush and eerily perfect confines of his mews flat in Kensington, “and quite a number of medical ones.”

Paul McKenna has declared war on the diet industry The British hypnotist and self-help author has something of the religious zealot about him - as well as a strong whiff of money. Last week he earned himself a £15 million television deal in the United States.

The man with the most powerful eyes in television was born in Enfield, Middlesex, to a builder and a home economics teacher.

He first discovered his “powers” in his twenties, when he hypnotised the boy next door into achieving an “A” in his biology A-level: “I couldn’t believe it worked, and started trying it with everything.”

Twenty years later, the 44-year-old has a multimillion-pound self-help empire and a number of well-known clients, including Sarah, Duchess of York, David Bowie, Little Britain’s David Walliams - whom he helped to mentally “shrink” the perceived distance of his cross-Channel charity swim - George Michael and Robbie Williams.

He smiles involuntarily when I mention them, unashamedly impressed by the whole celebrity “thing”.

And then there are the freaks - my word, not his - such as the woman who came to him with a phobia of jelly, those suffering from trichotillomania (where you pull out your hair and eat it), and one man who couldn’t stop himself doing a kind of silent, celebratory scream in the middle of sentences.

“When I asked him why he did it, he said that he would imagine he had just scored a goal at Wembley. He was using it as stress release, because it made him feel good. Like every other habit or tic, it was essentially just a chemical/muscular equation.”

He places his teacup almost too precisely on the black veneer coffee table, and suddenly I can’t help but to start visualise the contents of his ordered fridge: individually wrapped leftovers, probably labelled and relegated to their own specific areas.

Formerly a radio disc jockey, McKenna’s main focus now is helping people to lose weight. He is a food evangelist with a pathological hatred of the diet industry.

Sitting on his black velour couch, he cuts a tidy, anxious-to-please figure - and one who can’t abide the messiness of fidgeting. Instead, McKenna’s tirades about the misconceptions surrounding weight loss are peppered with nerdy, schoolboy expletives. “It’s got sh*g all to do with food and everything to do with psychology,” he says.

“There is a better case for banning diets than banning smoking,” he continues, not pausing to draw breath.

“Diets simply make people fatter, leading to obesity, which is a massive drain on our health services. Any regime that restricts what you eat just means that your body gets good at storing fat, and so the second you come off the diet - slam!,” he shouts, and I wonder if the sudden shift in volume works as some form of mind control, “the weight goes back on. If it weren’t so tragic, it would be funny that in the early part of the 21st century a load of people tried to starve themselves to make themselves thinner and actually made themselves fatter.”

McKenna’s weight-loss seminars, which he tours around the country, preach a simple sermon: to eat what you want, consciously, and only when hungry. He has, he says, been working with a group of doctors to make his self-improvement strategies available on the NHS, and hopes to meet up with the health minister later this year.

“The only worry is that the diet industry is so big and so powerful that there may be too much at stake there. Politicians, I’m sure, have been bought - I can’t think that they haven’t.” I disagree, disappointed that, after making so much sense, this last point just sounds barmy.

When I ask about celebrities and their promotion of fad diets, McKenna becomes so agitated that I fear he might take off, levitated by the sheer passion of his convictions.

“There’s a new kind of anorexic now: there’s your professional anorexic, and there are quite a number of famous people like that. They are right on the edge, walking around thinking, ‘I am so in control. You want to look like me, don’t you?’ These people are getting their serotonin highs from perceiving themselves as being better than other people.”

Is he alluding to people such as Victoria Beckham, whose excessive slimness seems to be their primary accomplishment? “I don’t know whether she has an eating disorder,” he gives a wry smile, “but I can say that some people just white-knuckle it. Every day it’s just a question of getting through the day, and sometimes they binge, and sometimes they starve or they become bulimic or anorexic.”

McKenna assures me that he refuses to work with the food fanatics, unless, of course, they allow him to concentrate on their underlying problems.

“An actress I won’t name came to see me recently, telling me she needed to lose 10 pounds. Now, she was anorexically thin, and I thought, ‘Not on my watch.’ So instead, we worked on her body dysmorphia, which most people have. They look at themselves in the mirror and go through a checklist of abuse: ‘Funny eyes, fat face, look at the state of my bottom…’

“But it is as if they are looking at themselves in one of those seaside mirrors. In her mind, the actress will never be thin enough, so I worked away on her for 45 minutes until eventually it just popped. Before she left, she said, ‘You know, I did used to get more roles when I was a little bit bigger. Actually, I look OK.’?”

It’s as we’re shaking our heads indulgently over human frailties that I realise I have smeared mud across McKenna’s opulent cream carpet with my boot.
To distract him, I turn the subject to sex. Now, McKenna may not come in the traditional Lothario packaging (”I’d like to come back in my next life and be liked for something other than my mind”), but he does have a long back-catalogue of Amazonian blondes.

After a relationship with GMTV’s Penny Smith, presenter Liz Fuller famously dumped him live on air. Now his beautiful former fiancée, Clare Staples, is said to be stepping out with his close friend Robbie Williams. “I like a pretty girl,” he admits.

After splitting up with his girlfriend of 18 months at Christmas, McKenna is currently single.

He doesn’t go for skinny girls, “because I just want them to go and eat a pie”, and laughingly concedes a liking for unbalanced women: “I love a mental case, because then I can fix them.” The next question is so obvious, McKenna poses it himself.

“Have I ever used my powers to seduce women?” he asks with a smile that screams “Yes, yes, yes!”, but he replies: “Well, that would be rather sad, don’t you think?”

There is, he goes on to explain, something called speed seduction, where one can work a woman into states of arousal, simply by making her remember how she’d felt when she’d once been in love - and then touching her on the arm, thereby linking those thoughts to you.

He claims never to have tried this himself - and a yearly income that already stood at £2.5 million and that new deal in America, may never need to do so.

He still has some work to do, though. As we leave the room, he sees the mud and a flicker of panic disrupts the placidity of his features. I picture him on his hands and knees, scrubbing frantically at the stain, as soon as I’ve left the building.

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Jan 17 2008

TV deal could make McKenna America’s biggest diet guru and earn him £23m

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 12:15 pm
TV deal could make McKenna America’s biggest diet guru and earn him £23m
Richard Simpson, Paul Revoir
Daily Mail - 17th January 2008

PAUL McKenna last night became Britain’s highestpaid TV personality after signing a golden handcuffs deal worth at least £23million.

The hypnotist has negotiated a three-year contract with the Discovery Channel which will see him become America’s hottest diet guru.

Discovery is paying him some £5million a year in the arrangement.

Based on estimates, he is also in line to earn at least another £2.5million a year from downloads as U.S. viewers pay for step-by-step guides from a website.

The deal to air the series - based on his best-selling book I Can Make You Thin - just takes in the U.S. Mr McKenna, 44, is expected to earn considerably more when the series is syndicated around the globe.

The contract eclipses that of Britain’s highest paid TV stars, including the £18million three-year BBC deal enjoyed by Jonathan Ross.

Mr McKenna’s hypnosis techniques are being seen as the answer to America’s growing obesity problem.

His first series will launch in March.

Discovery chiefs are said to want to make him as big as Dr Phil, America’s best known lifestyle guru.

The interactive format of the U.S. show will allow viewers to follow McKenna’s weight loss techniques while at home.

According to insiders the show will offer them the chance ‘to have the body they have always dreamed of’.

It is claimed his weight loss system has a 71 per cent success rate, using ‘psychological techniques’.

Mr McKenna has published a number of best-selling self-help books.

These include I Can Make You Rich and Change Your Life in 7 Days.

He started out his career as a DJ, before developing an interest in hypnotism.

In 1993 his TV series, The Hypnotic World of Paul McKenna aired on ITV The programme was shown in 42 countries and attracted an audience of 200million.

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Jan 16 2008

Paul McKenna signs £15m TV deal

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 12:14 pm

Paul McKenna signs £15m TV deal
Leigh Holmwood
The Guardian - 16th January 2008

Celebrity hypnotist Paul McKenna has signed a three-year golden handcuffs deal with the Discovery Channel in the US that could make him up to $30m (£15m).

It is thought the channel, which was formerly run by ex-BBC2 controller Jane Root, wants to market McKenna as an alternative to long-standing American self-help TV host Dr Phil.

In March, McKenna, a former Capital FM DJ, will appear in a new prime-time series, I Can Make You Thin, in which he will attempt to help the studio audience and viewers with weight issues.

A UK series of the same name recently aired on Sky One and a related book is currently No 1 in the Sunday Times bestseller charts.

McKenna also had success in the UK with another Sky One series, I Can Change Your Life.

The three-year Discovery deal, together with spin-off merchandise and downloads of his weight loss techniques which viewers can pay for, could make McKenna between $25m and $30m, according to a source.

The deal will see McKenna join the ranks of other British talent to have made it big in the US, including Simon Cowell, Gordon Ramsay, Ricky Gervais and Hugh Laurie.

McKenna will now divide his time between London and Los Angeles, where he has recently bought a house.

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Jan 11 2008

Paul McKenna makes himself rich - and moves to Hollywood

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 10:12 am

Paul McKenna makes himself rich - and moves to Hollywood
Laura Roberts
The Daily Mail - 11th January 2008

He has promised to make help people lose weight, get rich and even get bigger breasts using the power of hypnotism so perhaps it was inevitable that Paul McKenna would move to Los Angeles.

The British hypnotist has bought a £3.4 million home in the Hollywood Hills in a bid to conquer the US market.

He has already helped comedian Ellen DeGeneres to quit her smoking habit and is known to be a friend of the now-established Beckhams.

A builder’s son from Enfield, North London he still has an eye for a bargain and bought the Regency-style home for half a million pounds less than the original asking price.

The impressive home is located in an area known as Rising Glen and with 4,529 sq feet of space, five bedrooms, four bathrooms and a pool he will certainly be able to entertain his wealthy neighbours who include actress Brittany Murphy and a slew of film directors and music producers.

The 4-car detached garage will perfectly house his collection of cars which include a Bentley Arnage, Ferrari 575, Range Rover Sport and a Jeep wagon Back in the UK McKenna has treated high profile British names such as the Duchess of York, David Bowie, David Beckham, and George Michael.

In September last year he brought out a book called I Can Make You Rich after talking to successful entrepreneurs such as Sir Philip Green and Body Shop founder Anita Roddick.

Until the 1990s McKenna worked as a radio DJ for Capital Radio, and Radio One among others before leaving to concentrate on hypnosis.

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Jan 07 2008

I’ll make you thin, rich and happy

Category: Uncategorizedpaulmckennafans @ 12:28 pm

I’ll make you thin, rich and happy
Evening Standard
Liz Hoggard - 7th January 2008

In the first part of our exclusive Paul McKenna life-change plan, Britain’s top motivational coach reveals how, despite his phenomenal success, his own life is still far from perfect.

PAUL McKenna is giving me permission to flirt. I’m sitting on his couch, eyes closed, fingers pressed into my palms.

It’s all a bit excruciating. But already he’s identified a conflict in my love life. One part of me wants to to be more proactive; the other is making damn sure I don’t get hurt again.

“Even though they are taking you in opposite directions, they both want the best for you,” he advises me. “Is it possible to unite these two guys? Place your palms against your chest, integrate it all at the unconscious level and don’t be surprised by all the delightful changes that happen over the next two days.” Blimey.

A multi-millionaire, McKenna, 44, is the UK’s top motivational coach. His clients include Geri Halliwell, Sophie Dahl and Robbie Williams. He helped David Walliams with the psychological aspects of his Channel swim. “I taught him a method of time distortion so it speeds up. I use it myself on plane journeys.” But it’s not just celebrities: London’s chattering classes are queuing up to attend McKenna seminars, which sell out at £250 a time. Go to any dinner party and you’re quite likely to meet someone he’s helped quit smoking, lose weight or mend a broken heart.

McKenna insists he’s not a guru or a Svengali. But through neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) the positive thinking and visualisation process that underpins his work he can help us to reprogramme our brains. He compares it to rewiring a computer.

We meet at his Kensington mews house.

Interviewers always report back breathlessly about his silver Bentley, Brioni suits and gleaming Rolex. But today McKenna is in jeans and a simple sweater, his hair in a fashionable buzz cut. He looks far more normal. But then it seems he has undergone a Pauline conversion.

Yes he enjoys “nice toys”, but now he’s on a mission to heal people.

January is Paul McKenna month. We all yearn to change our lives after Christmas excess and cannily he’s just republished his 2005 bestseller I Can Make You Thin, with an extra chapter. His face is already plastered all over London railway stations.

So far, so obvious. But he’s also determined to blow his old enemy the diet industry out of the water.

“I am on a quest to close down the hateyour-body industry,” he declares. “Seventy-five per cent of people put on more weight than when they started. The reason half the country is overweight is because we’ve been dieting for the past 40 years. It’s not just that diets don’t work: they are the problem, cynically profiteering out of other people’s misery. I couldn’t sleep at night knowing that but these f***ers can. There is a better case for banning diets than banning smoking.

Over 20 million people are putting themselves at risk because they’re overweight.”

McKenna claims his own weight-loss programme has a 71 per cent success rate (compared with nine per cent for diets).

“There’s an army of doctors right behind me who want to get this on the NHS.” And his system is brilliantly simple. There are four golden rules. One: when you are hungry, eat. Two: eat what you want, not what you think you should. Three: eat consciously, and enjoy every mouthful. Four: when you think you are full, stop eating.

The key is understanding the difference between “emotional hunger” where we shovel in food because we feel bored or upset and true physical hunger.

The funny thing is, McKenna has always been thin. So what’s his motivation? “Most of my family is overweight. I’m contrary, I think. My parents would say: ‘Eat up, there are starving kids in India’, and I’d go ‘I can’t see how me being overweight helps them.’ The more someone tells me to do something, the more it makes me question it.” The careful dedication to his 2004 book Change Your Life in Seven Days reads: “To my parents, who gave me more than I realised”.

Was he a tricky son? “Oh, I don’t doubt it, probably still am,” he laughs. “We weren’t that sort of family where we have big emotional outpourings, although my mum and dad have said some nice things to me in recent years.” McKenna grew up, the elder of two sons, in Enfield, north London. His father was a builder, his mother a home economics teacher. He remembers watching them lurch between times of plenty and times when they had to “batten down the hatches” “I would see my parents’ ups and downs and I thought it would be nice not to have that pressure.” From the age of 11 he attended a Catholic comprehensive in north London run by Jesuit priests who, he claims, specialised in guilt. He was told he was worthless (a school report said: “If he carries on like this, he’ll never amount to anything”).

When he published his first book he sent a copy to his old English teacher, with “F*** off ” written inside. Childish but satisfying.

“I spent years in a Catholic school so I understand from the kings of mind manipulation how human beings work,” he says.

He left school at 17 with two Olevels and an A-level in art and became a DJ, like his hero, Kenny Everett, making his way from Topshop, via Radio Caroline and Capital, to Radio 1. He also moonlighted as a hypnotist, having been impressed by a fellow practitioner whom he interviewed on his radio show. He started practising on friends. At first it was a party trick where he’d turn people into washing machines, but soon he was selling out theatres. In 1993, ITV launched The Hypnotic World of Paul McKenna, where volunteers were hypnotised into performing funny tasks.
Viewing figures reached 13 million.

He could have been another Paul Daniels. But, looking back, he wasn’t happy. He cut down on the stunt TV and began using hypnosis to help individuals with particular problems or phobias. He met Richard Bandler, the Californian cofounder of NLP a form of psychotherapeutic counselling developed in the 1970s.

They started running seminars together and Bandler, a former cocaine abuser, became his mentor, helping him to reprogramme his mind: “In the past I used to be quite controlling, almost robotic.” Today, Paul McKenna Training is the biggest hypnosis and NLP training centre in the world. But he has his detractors. In 1994, a participant on his show said he had developed schizophrenia as a result of being hypnotised. His claims were taken up in the national press McKenna sued and won the libel case.

But another accusation pursued him. In 1996, he had earned a PhD in hypnotherapy from LaSalle University in Louisiana, which turned out to be unaccredited. The Daily Mirror claimed McKenna knew the qualification was bogus. Eventually McKenna won damages. He also went on to get what he calls a “proper” doctorate from a UK-based business school and turned his PhD thesis into Change Your Life in Seven Days.
What’s the worst thing people have said about him? McKenna falls over himself to tell me. “That I’m a fake, a fraud, that it’s all pyramid selling; that I don’t really care about other people, which I find hurtful.

If I was interested in making money, I’d be in banking or oil.” Stop worrying about hypnotists, he says bluntly, the real people to fear are cult leaders, politicians, lunatic religious leaders, salesman “all of whom coerce and manipulate people”.

THERE is something incredibly endearing about McKenna, as easy as it is to represent him as part Wizard of Oz (small man, large megaphone), part Princess Di. A self-confessed geek, he describes his own life as a work in progress. Although he meets your gaze with authority, he is incredibly fidgety. He worries about going bald; he worries about his beaky nose.

“Until a few years ago, I wasn’t the major shareholder in my feelings,” he has admitted. “I thought I needed a bigger house, more cars, more beautiful girls, more money, more fame. Then I tipped the other way. I realised I had everything I wanted and began to make peace with aspects of myself I hadn’t wanted to admit to.” In fact, these days he and the psychological community are reading from the same page. They attend his seminars.

McKenna, who was once rabidly antitherapy (he believes it takes too long), is working with positive psychologists, Jungian therapists, philosophers, you name it.

“It’s about training your brain to spot which moments you felt happy in and to search for more happy moments.” And it’s not enough to just have “slick skills”; compassion is everything, he insists.

There’s no denying McKenna is a workaholic.

He relaxes with trashy TV and going out to dinner: “I’m very sociable.” Most days he practises Big Mind meditation, which encourages you to integrate the serene and shameful parts of yourself.

He accepts people are fascinated by his love life. “People have a right to know if I walk my talk: whether I’m authentic and consistent.” He has talked about being a commitment-phobe but admits: “I’ve had my heart broken, I’ve been trashed a few times” (past girlfriends include GMTV presenter Penny Smith and model Liz Fuller, who dumped him live on her cable TV show). His book I Can Mend Your Emotional Heart came from experience: Richard Bandler helped him recover with a technique developed for abused women.

“Out of my pain came a resource for other people and profit,” he says, with a glint.
He says his girlfriend of 18 months, Niki Roe, a dog trainer, hates the limelight.
“She doesn’t like public events but does it for me, which I appreciate.” On the walls of his flat he has silver-framed photos of his Great Dane, Mr Big. At 44, does he want children? “At the moment, I’m not sure, I don’t think so. Although a friend said, ‘Look how much you love your dog: imagine that for a child!’” McKenna once boasted he’d be a millionaire by 30. His last book, 2007’s I Can Make You Rich (based on talking to gurus from Philip Green to Richard Branson) was deliberately controversial “it’s meant to piss people off”. He thinks the British are still encouraged to feel guilty about success. And actually there’s an egalitarian streak. He thinks working people have been tricked into thinking poor by the ruling classes.

“If you think money is bad, you will unconsciously sabotage your attempts to create more of it.” He’s currently our top-selling non-fiction author. But he is about to go global. When we meet he is busy packing up his life. For the next year McKenna will be based in LA, where he’s working on an interactive self-improvement television show. “It will be digital, downloadable. Clearly books will always be around but we’ll be able to reach millions more.” For a rich man he is working his butt off. “In some ways,” he says, “I don’t feel I’ve had any say in it. I believe I’ve shaped my destiny but it’s as though life’s taken me in a direction, too.”

When that’s launched he says he may “nearly retire”. I doubt it he’s too much of an evangelist. “I do want to help the person in front of me but at the same time I want to do a damn good job,” he says. “So sometimes it’s my outrageous ego. I won’t stop until they’re fixed.” Am I fixed? Two weeks on I’m not exactly embracing the postman but there’s optimism.

I like McKenna; he doesn’t patronise and he understands wariness (he’s been crazy in love, too). He’d like to see me “open up enough for something good to happen”, to take “evaluated” risk. He even diagnoses some self-sabotage. I’d go back. And I appreciate his honesty. “I’ve been asked to do books on relationships,” he laughs, “and my own response is: if I can stay in one for long enough, I’ll do one.”

Paul McKenna’s revised book I Can Make You Thin is out now (Bantam Press, £10.99)..

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