Acorah's first television appearance was on the satellite TV channel
Granada Breeze in 1996. During his five years with the channel, he began with
Livetime before later appearing weekly on
Psychic Livetime. He also appeared on
Predictions which started out as a showcase for various studio guests but later became a vehicle for Acorah alone and renamed
Predictions with Derek Acorah. In 2002, Acorah also featured in the television series
Antiques Ghost Show, and in 2004 he was presented with the
Variety Club of Great Britain's Multichannel TV Personality of the Year Award.
Most Haunted In July 2001, Acorah joined a new British television programme called
Haunting Truths. It was subsequently sold to
Living and renamed
Most Haunted. He worked on the show for six series.
Yvette Fielding, a presenter and executive producer of
Most Haunted, initially stated "there is no acting on this programme, none whatsoever. Everything you see and you hear is real." However, significant media attention was directed at the show in 2005, after Acorah claimed to channel spirits with names that had allegedly been suggested to him in advance, those names being "Rik Eedles" and "Kreed Kafer", anagrams of "Derek Lies" and "Derek Faker". These names were created by the show's then-resident sceptic and parapsychologist
Ciarán O'Keeffe in a successful attempt to expose Acorah. Speaking in 2006, Fielding said of Acorah: "We tell people everything is real, then it turns out he was a fake, so he had to go". His time on the show saw him regularly being parodied, most notably with
Shirley Ghostman (portrayed by
Marc Wootton), which drew on elements of Acorah and
Colin Fry, and Wootton once invaded one of Acorah's shows. He was also parodied by
Dawn French on an episode of
French and Saunders, by
Jon Culshaw on
Dead Ringers and by
Hugh Laurie on
Saturday Night Live.
Other appearances After his 2005 departure from
Most Haunted, Acorah filmed a one-off special for
LivingTV, ''Derek Acorah's Quest for Guy Fawkes
followed by Derek Acorah's Ghost Towns with Ruggie Media. This programme ran for three series. In 2008, Acorah took part in two series for Sky Real Lives titled Derek Acorah
. In July 2006, he made a cameo appearance in the Doctor Who'' episode "
Army of Ghosts". In November 2009, Acorah featured in
Michael Jackson: The Live Seance, in which he was shown on live television attempting to contact the singer's spirit. The programme was named the worst TV programme of 2009 in a poll of more than 9,000
Yahoo! users. Acorah's other television work includes
Celebrity Five Go to..., ''
Harry Hill's TV Burp, Celebrity Quitters
and Paranormal Egypt
. He also made appearances on Celebrity Juice, Loose Lips, Richard and Judy, Bo' Selecta!, Brainiac: Science Abuse, The Paul O'Grady Show, The Weakest Link and Loose Women. On film, he had a cameo in Big Fat Gypsy Gangster (2011), and played a small role in Crispy's Curse'' (2017), although the film failed to achieve a
general release. In May 2012, Acorah claimed to have received a psychic message from
Madeleine McCann via a 'spirit guide', stating that the child had died some time ago but would soon be reincarnated. After widespread media outrage, Acorah used the same newspaper to publish an apology to McCann's parents. Acorah competed in the
twentieth series of
Celebrity Big Brother. He left the house on the final night in fourth place. == Personal life ==