The BBC has paid tribute to Michael Mosley who sadly passed away at the age of 67 during a show which aired tonight (June 14) called Michael Mosley: The Doctor Who Changed Britain.
08.06.2024 - 07:17 / deadline.com
The search for Dr Michael Mosley has entered its fourth day on the Greek island of Symi, where the popular doctor and TV presenter went missing on Wednesday following a beach outing with his wife and friends.
The UK media, which have all been covering the story exhaustively, reported Saturday that local authorities are now concentrating their efforts on a part of the coast further away from the route Mosley was expected to take from the beach to his home.
The BBC reports that a detailed account of Mosley’s last known movements includes him leaving Agios Nikolaos beach in the north-east corner of the island at around 1.30pm. He was expected to reach the town of Pedi where he could take a bus back to his holiday home in Symi, but new CCTV footage shows him – carrying an umbrella, presumably to shield him from the hot afternoon sun – apparently making for a mountainous path inland.
The Daily Mail reports that Mosley’s wife Dr Clare Bailey raised the alarm with authorities Wednesday evening when her husband failed to show up at the holiday home they were visiting on the island. The couple’s four children are now reported to be flying to join her in the search – which has involved divers, patrol boats, helicopters and officials using drones. Local residents have told the British media this week they are flummoxed by Mosley’s disappearance on an island of small population and very little known crime.
Mosley is one of the UK’s best known TV presenters, making his name in a series of nutrition and health documentaries after first working as a producer at the BBC. He is the author of several health books, and is credited with creating the popular 5:2 diet, in which people lose weight by reducing their intake on two days in
The BBC has paid tribute to Michael Mosley who sadly passed away at the age of 67 during a show which aired tonight (June 14) called Michael Mosley: The Doctor Who Changed Britain.
The failure to find Dr Michael Mosley sooner after he went missing on the Greek island of Symi has been branded 'absurd' by one police source.
The search operation for Dr Michael Mosley has been branded "absurd" after the star's body was just 100 yards from a restaurant. The beloved TV personality was tragically found on the Greek island of Symi on Sunday.
Michaela Zee Dr. Michael Mosley, a British medical journalist and BBC presenter, was found dead on a Greek island on Sunday following a four-day search. He was 67.
Colleagues of Dr Michael Mosley have led tributes hailing the late TV broadcaster, producer and columnist, as a 'national treasure' and a 'kind and gentle man'.
Michael Mosley has sadly passed away.
The wife of TV doctor and columnist Michael Mosley said it is “devastating” to have lost her “wonderful, funny, kind and brilliant husband” as she confirmed he has been found dead on the Greek island of Symi after going missing on Wednesday, 5 June. His body was discovered in a rocky area beside Agia Marina on Symi on Sunday after an extensive search led by emergency workers, around 30-minutes walk from the village of Pedi where Dr Mosley was last seen on CCTV.The 67-year-old TV personality was with his wife and friends at Agios Nikolaos beach on Wednesday, before going alone for a walk to the centre of the island. In a statement from his agent to the PA news agency, Dr Clare Bailey Mosley said: “I don’t know quite where to begin with this.
Tributes have poured in for Michael Mosley as a body is found in the search for the TV doctor. Dr Mosley went missing on the Greek island of Symi on Wednesday (June 4), resulting in an extensive search operation led by emergency workers over the last few days.
A cameraman who spotted a body in the search for Dr Michael Mosley broke down in tears as he addressed the TV personality’s family. Michael, 67, who is known for presenting Trust Me I’m a Doctor, was last seen by friends on Wednesday, 5 June, before he went for a walk to the centre of the Greek island of Symi. A body, which has yet to be formally identified, was found beneath a fence that runs around a bar on Agia Marina beach on Sunday, 9 June.
Celebrities who knew doctor Michael Mosley have begun issuing heartbreaking tributes, after a body was found in the search for him in Greece.The body, which is yet to be formally identified, was discovered in a rocky area on Symi on Sunday 9 June after an extensive search operation led by emergency workers. It was found around a 30 minutes walk from the village of Pedi where the 67-year-old TV doctor was last seen on Wednesday.The body, with an umbrella close by, was discovered beneath a fence that runs around a bar on Agia Marina beach, which is surrounded by hilly, rocky terrain. Fellow TV stars, friends, and colleagues have spoken out after the announcement.
Ranvir Singh has shared a heartbreaking tribute after a body was found in the search for This Morning star Michael Mosley. On Sunday, it was confirmed that a body had been found in the rescue operation for missing TV doctor Michael - who vanished near a hiking trail on a stunning Greek island.The body and an umbrella were discovered in a rocky area beside Agia Marina on Symi on Sunday after an extensive search operation led by emergency workers.The body has not yet been formally identified.The Good Morning Britain presenter and former Strictly star Ranvir posted: "Terribly sad news.
A body has been discovered in a rocky area beside Agia Marina during the search for TV doctor and columnist Michael Mosley, who went missing while on holiday on the Greek island of Symi earlier this week. Part of the search and rescue mission turned to a network of caves known locally as The Abyss, The Sun reports and it’s reported that a body was found nearby on Sunday morning.
A body has been found in the search for TV presenter Michael Mosley on a Greek island, according to the BBC.
Michael Mosley's search teams using a sniffer dog have reportedly left the scene and returned to Athens, possibly due to concerns over the dog's health.TV doctor Michael Mosley was last seen strolling through the town of Pedi on the Aegean island of Symi on Wednesday 5 June at 1.52pm, roughly 20 minutes after he went on a hiking trail from St Nickolas beach. It's speculated that the 67 year old may have encountered difficulties during his hike, but on Saturday night, searchers shifted their attention to a cave system known as The Abyss, where they believe he might have ventured.
A body has been found in the search for missing TV doctor Michael Mosley, it has been reported. The 67-year-old had disappeared while on holiday in Greece.
Search teams, including a sniffer dog, looking for Michael Mosley have reportedly left the scene and returned to Athens, possibly due to concerns over the dog's health.
The wife of missing British TV presenter Dr Michael Mosley has issued a statement three days into the search for her husband on a Greek island after he disappeared during a hike, saying the family will not lose hope of his return.
The search operation looking for TV doctor Michael Mosley has been moved to a 'very dangerous' area of the Greek island where he went missing. The focus has been switched to an area known locally as 'The Abyss'.
Michael Mosley's wife Dr Clare Bailey has vowed to "not lose hope" in the hunt for her missing husband as the search for him on the Greek island of Symi continues. "It has been three days since Michael left the beach to go for a walk.The longest and most unbearable days for myself and my children,' she began in a statement on Saturday, 8 June.The This Morning TV doctor, 67, was last seen by his GP wife on Wednesday afternoon after leaving St Nicholas Beach in the north west of the island for a hike to the nearby town of Pedi.
Firefighters searching for the miss TV star Dr Michael Mosley have said the operation is "dangerous". Due to the hot and dry conditions on the island of Symi, in Greece, emergency services are struggling to carry out their search. Individual firefighters have been forced to split up and are covering vast expanses of steep rocky terrain on their own.