Ex-Blue Peter star Yvette Fielding says Most Haunted help make her fortune, but only after a shock setback: 'TV bosses fired me when I had a baby'
TV presenter Yvette Fielding once bought an Aston Martin for £95,000 – and sold it six months later for just £60,000.
Fielding, 52, the youngest person to present Blue Peter, in 1987 aged 18, says she and her husband, TV producer Karl Beattie, 58, also bought Ferraris and Bentleys with the money they made from their popular TV series Most Haunted.
She now lives in a former gentleman's hunting lodge on a sprawling 20-acre estate in Cheshire and says her biggest regret was not buying a second home in Cornwall sooner.
Her ghost-hunting novel, The House In The Woods, is published on Thursday.

Trailblazer: Yvette Fielding's early days on Blue Peter led to a lucrative TV career
What did your parents teach you about money?
That you should try to get ahead and be your own boss. Both my parents worked full-time.
My mum was a receptionist while my dad was an entrepreneur who built a boring and drilling business. He worked seven days a week. He taught me that you get out of life what you put in.
Money wasn't tight because my parents worked so hard. I wasn't spoiled, but I had a pony and lived in a nice house with central heating and carpets which was a big thing in the late 60s and early 70s.
I went to a private stage school in Cheshire. I loved it and had my first audition at the BBC at age 13 – and that was it, my career had started. I honestly thought I was the luckiest person in the world.
Have you ever struggled to make ends meet?
Yes, in the 90s after I was fired from a TV show – which was not Blue Peter – because I had just had a baby and I wasn't considered sexy enough. If it happened today, I would have taken them to court. It was outrageous.
I really struggled. I was on my own bringing up a young child. I couldn't pay the mortgage, so I ended up having to sell my house and move back to Cheshire. I moved in with my mum and got a job selling dresses to shops. The shop assistants I met would say: 'Oh my god, it's the girl off the TV.'
I felt embarrassed. Sometimes, I look back on that time and it brings tears to my eyes. I'll never forgive the people who got rid of me.
Then, after about six months, the phone rang. It was another TV channel and they asked me to do a show. After that, the work just came flooding in.
Have you ever been paid silly money?
Yes, when I did I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out Of Here. When they told me how much they'd pay, I did a little jig around the kitchen.
It was an astonishing sum, but when I was there and eating tarantula slop and the hairs of the tarantula were sticking in the back of my throat, I no longer cared about the money. I just wanted to go home.
What was the best year of your financial life?
It was 2005, the year we paid the mortgage off on the house we still live in. I was 36.
By that time, we had established our production company and were making Most Haunted which had become a global hit. It was sold to more than 100 different territories.
The most expensive thing you bought for fun?
It was a silver Aston Martin Vantage for £95,000 in 2005. I sold it six months later for only £60,000.
It was an amazing car and I absolutely loved driving it, but I decided to sell because I wanted to use the money to build stables for my horses.
Even though the Aston Martin lost its value so quickly, I don't regret buying it. My husband and I have owned some ridiculous cars such as Ferraris and Bentleys over the years and loved every minute driving them.
The best money decision you have made?
Buying our home in Cheshire, a former gentleman's hunting lodge, in 2003 for £725,000.
We were scared to death to do it because we had to take out a huge mortgage. But we fell in love with it when we saw it and nervously took the leap – and I'm so pleased we did as it's definitely gone up in value.
It's a really old, quirky five-bedroom house with foundations dating back to the 1400s. We have 20 acres of land and a lake.

Young gun: Yvette Fielding was the youngest person to present Blue Peter, in 1987 aged 18
What is your biggest money mistake?
We are buying a second home in Cornwall, a two-bedroom cottage by the sea, and I wish we had done it sooner. Investing in property is the way forward.
Do you save into a pension?
Not any more. I started saving into a pension when I was in my early 20s and invested a lump sum in the early 2000s.
I stopped because I reached the maximum I wanted to put in. I took one out because I want to be able to pay for my own care later in life. I don't want my children to have to worry about that.
Do you invest directly in the stock market?
No. It's too risky for me. I don't want to gamble with my savings or the money that I have earned from hard work.
The one little luxury you treat yourself to?
I love a massage every few months. I usually go to an all-day spa, either with my mother or daughter Mary who is 21. It costs about £250 in total for two people.
If you were Chancellor what would you do?
I would get rid of inheritance tax and increase funding for repairs on stately homes. There are all these big beautiful stately houses around the country that hold our history.
Often, the families who are living there can't afford to do them up and they are falling into wrack and ruin. I think it's a disgrace.
What is your number one financial priority?
To make sure my family are looked after. I've always encouraged our children to go off and chase their dreams and work hard, like I was taught.
But at the end of the day, you want to make sure that if anything awful happens – like another pandemic – your family is safe and you can look after them.
THIS IS MONEY PODCAST
-
How bad will the energy crunch get?
-
Could the inflation spike lead to stagflation?
-
Were the social care tax hike and the triple lock right?
-
Are you a mover, a flipper or a forever-homeowner?
-
Is there a way to boost YOUR state pension?
-
As deliveries boom, could you fall victim to a parcel text scam?
-
How low can mortgage rates go and is it worth jumping ship to fix?
-
Are your energy bills about to soaras the price cap shifts?
-
Do the sums stack up on green home improvements?
-
New plans to tackle bogus ratings online: Can you trust reviews?
-
What links rocketing car hire prices and inflation?
-
Will we pay out on an 8% triple lock pension increase?
-
Underpaid state pension scandal and the future of retirement
-
The stamp duty race to avoid a double false economy
-
Would you invest in sneakers... or the new space race?
-
Is loyalty starting to pay for savers and customers?
-
What goes up must come down? The 18-year property cycle
-
Are you a Premium Bond winner or loser?
-
Is a little bit of inflation really such a bad thing?
-
Holidays abroad are back on... but would you book one?
-
Build up a cash pot then buy and sell your way to profits
-
Are you itching to spend after lockdown or planning to save?
-
Are 95% mortgages to prop up first-time buyers a wise move?
-
Was Coinbase's listing bitcoin and crypto's coming of age?
-
Is working from home here to stay and how do you change career?
-
What's behind the rising tide of financial scams?
-
Hot or not? How to spot a buyer's or seller's market
-
How to save or invest in an Isa - and why it's worth doing
-
Is the UK primed to rebound... and what now for Scottish Mortgage?
-
The 'escape velocity' Budget and the £3bn state pension victory
-
Should the stamp duty holiday become a permanent vacation?
-
What happens next to the property market and house prices?
-
The UK has dodged a double-dip recession, so what next?
-
Will you confess your investing mistakes?
-
Should the GameStop frenzy be stopped to protect investors?
-
Should people cash in bitcoin profits or wait for the moon?
-
Is this the answer to pension freedom without the pain?
-
Are investors right to buy British for better times after lockdown?
-
The astonishing year that was 2020... and Christmas taste test
-
Is buy now, pay later bad news or savvy spending?
-
Would a 'wealth tax' work in Britain?
-
Is there still time for investors to go bargain hunting?
-
Is Britain ready for electric cars? Driving, charging and buying...
-
Will the vaccine rally and value investing revival continue?
-
How bad will Lockdown 2 be for the UK economy?
-
Is this the end of 'free' banking or can it survive?
-
Has the V-shaped recovery turned into a double-dip?
-
Should British investors worry about the US election?
-
Is Boris's 95% mortgage idea a bad move?
-
Can we keep our lockdown savings habit?
-
Will the Winter Economy Plan save jobs?
-
How to make an offer in a seller's market and avoid overpaying
-
Could you fall victim to lockdown fraud? How to fight back
-
What's behind the UK property and US shares lockdown mini-booms?
-
Do you know how your pension is invested?
-
Online supermarket battle intensifies with M&S and Ocado tie-up
-
Is the coronavirus recession better or worse than it looks?
-
Can you make a profit and get your money to do some good?
-
Are negative interest rates off the table and what next for gold?
-
Has the pain in Spain killed off summer holidays this year?
-
How to start investing and grow your wealth
-
Will the Government tinker with capital gains tax?
-
Will a stamp duty cut and Rishi's rescue plan be enough?
-
The self-employed excluded from the coronavirus rescue
-
Has lockdown left you with more to save or struggling?
-
Are banks triggering a mortgage credit crunch?
-
The rise of the lockdown investor - and tips to get started
-
Are electric bikes and scooters the future of getting about?
-
Are we all going on a summer holiday?
-
Could your savings rate turn negative?
-
How many state pensions were underpaid? With Steve Webb
-
Santander's 123 chop and how do we pay for the crash?
- Guides for my finances
- The best savings rates
- Best cash Isas
- A better bank account
- A cheaper mortgage
- The best DIY investing platform
- The best credit cards
- A cheaper energy deal
- Better broadband and TV deals
- Cheaper car insurance
- Stock market data
- Power Portfolio investment tracker
- This is Money's newsletter
- This is Money's podcast
- Investing Show videos
- Help from This is Money
- Financial calculators