Stacy or Stacey may refer to:
In the United States:
Stacey Dooley (born 9 March 1987) is a British television personality who rose to fame in 2009 after appearing in a number of BBC Three documentaries highlighting child labour issues in developing countries.
Originally hailing from Luton, where she once worked as a shop assistant, Dooley was approached to appear in a series of proposed cutting edge documentaries for the BBC.
While taking part in the real-life series Blood, Sweat and T-shirts, she was presented as a typical fashion-obsessed consumer. However, during her appearance Dooley was shown to develop a strong interest in the nature of third world labour laws, and subsequently had her own show, Stacey Dooley Investigates, greenlit in August 2009.
The two-part special was shown on BBC Three throughout August and September 2009. It also aired in Australia on ABC2 from 2 June 2010.
In October 2010, BBC Three aired a further two programmes, the first on former child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the second on sex trafficking and 'underage sexual slavery' in Cambodia. Radio Times commented on the series, "She sees the joyless expressions of girls parading before men in a bar in Phnom Penh - one girl clutches a cuddly toy. It seems a hopeless situation, especially when we learn that the children are being betrayed by their own families. But spirited, empathetic Stacey won't be thwarted, and sees a way out via a charity that gives [the children] a new purpose in life."
Stacey Solomon (born 4 October 1989) is an English singer, television presenter and reality TV star. She rose to fame during her time on the sixth series of The X Factor, coming third overall on the show. She gained a number one single on both the UK Singles Chart and the Irish Singles Chart when her fellow The X Factor finalists released a cover of "You Are Not Alone".
Solomon won the tenth series of reality television show I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!. and was named "Queen of the Jungle". Solomon's debut single, a cover of "Driving Home for Christmas", was released on 19 December 2011.
Solomon was born in Essex to a Jewish family. Solomon attended King Solomon High School. At the age of 17, Solomon became pregnant by her boyfriend of the time (Dean Cox). The young couple split sometime before the birth of their son Zachary on 21 March 2008. Since 2009, Solomon had been dating boyfriend Aaron Barham who she met on holiday in Greece. The couple became engaged on 4 December 2011 - shortly after it was announced that they were due to have a baby in the Spring. Solomon gave birth to her second son, named Leighton, on 5 May 2012.
Stacey Kent (born March 27, 1968) is a Grammy nominated American jazz singer.
Kent attended Newark Academy in Livingston, New Jersey. Her paternal grandfather was Russian. She graduated from Sarah Lawrence College in New York, and moved to England after her graduation. While studying at London's Guildhall School of Music and Drama, she met the tenor saxophonist Jim Tomlinson, whom she married on August 9, 1991.
In the early 1990s, Kent began her professional career singing regularly at Café Boheme in London's Soho. After two or three years, Kent began opening for established jazz acts across the road at the Ronnie Scott's nightclub in London.
Her first CD, Close Your Eyes, was released in 1997. She has released nine CDs as of 2011[update], and has been also featured on Tomlinson's albums, most recently The Lyric (2006), which won "Album of the Year" at the 2006 BBC Jazz Awards and was re-released on Blue Note in 2011.
Kent's music has been championed by critic and jazz trumpeter Humphrey Lyttelton, and she won the 2001 British Jazz Award and the 2002 BBC Jazz Award for Best Vocalist. She has also presented jazz programmes on BBC Radio 2 and 3.
Jonathan Stephen Ross, OBE (born 17 November 1960) is an English television and radio presenter, best known for presenting the BBC One chat show Friday Night with Jonathan Ross from 2001 until he left the BBC in 2010. Ross began hosting a new chat show on ITV1 starting 3 September 2011. Ross also hosted his own radio show on BBC Radio 2, and acted as a film critic and presenter of the Film programme. Other regular roles have included being a regular panellist on the comedy sports quiz They Think It's All Over from 1999 to 2006, and presenting the annual British Comedy Awards from 1991 to 2007, and 2009 onwards.
Ross began his television career as a programme researcher, before débuting as a television presenter for The Last Resort with Jonathan Ross on Channel 4 in 1987. Over the next decade he had several radio and television roles, many through his own production company, Channel X. In 1995 he sold his stake in Channel X, and embarked on a career with the BBC. In 1999, Ross took over presenting the Film programme from Barry Norman, and also began presenting his own radio show, while two years later he began hosting Friday Night with Jonathan Ross. For the chat show, Ross won three British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) awards for Best Entertainment Performance, in 2004, 2006 and 2007. By 2006 Ross was believed to be the BBC's highest paid star. In 2005, Ross was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to broadcasting. Ross has been involved in controversies throughout his broadcasting career. As a result, in 2008 he wrote a semi-autobiographical work titled Why Do I Say These Things?, detailing some of his life experiences.
Hobos, thieves and academics
Plot
Jade shows off her new girlfriend, celezbian DJ, Samantha Fox, whilst Michael deals with a digital and universal dilemma: fake profile pictures. He is excited to be meeting a sexy Bollywood model for a drink, but is unpleasantly surprised. Lucky for him, his cold sore-cursed roommate comes to save the day and leaves a lasting (and contagious) impression.
Plot
Jade steals Stacey's precious ring for an exciting night out on the red carpet with her celebrity lover, Samantha Fox. Unfortunately the ring gets lost in the most unusual (and intimate) of places and Michael and his doctor boyfriend get called in to solve this unconventional medical emergency.
Plot
Meet Jack Docherty: the nicest guy you'll ever meet with two restraining orders. Jack seeks out the help of therapist Neal Hannon to discover why he continues to fall in love with crazy women. Jack reflects on all his romances, past and present, and finds that the person most responsible for his plight may be himself.
Plot
On the wedding day of a writer's friend, things aren't looking good when the groom goes missing before the ceremony. During his and his other male friend's effort to retrieve him, that writer named Mike can't help but tell the story of his youth with his friends. Ever since he met them on his first day at a new school, they shared the common experiences of growing up and life's discoveries.
Keywords: 1980s, african-american, basketball, bet, binge-drinking, black-american, breaking-the-fourth-wall, brother-sister-relationship, classroom, coming-of-age
From boyhood to manhood, you can always count on your best friends.
Mike: Time was on crack today.
Mike: Now, any other day time drags during the last period. But not today. Naw, time was on crack today!
Mike: You would've sworn they were professors at Harvard. They had breath mints down to a science.
Stacey: You think my sister a ho or somethin'? You think she a fuckin' toy?::Young Mike: Naw, man I think she purdy!
Young Roland: You might fuck around and say some shit that'll get you shot.::Young Mike: Shot?::Young Roland: Shot? Ya know? Guns? Bang-bang? This nigga don't know nothin'!
Young Slim: Ms. Hughes, what page fifteen on?
Lisa: Ya'll must think I'm stupid like one of those Thelma & Louise bitches!::Mike: Nah, Nah----::Lisa: Car broke down?! Tell that fool he could at least faced me like a man!::Mike: But, But--::Lisa: I'm not gon' cry! I'm not! I spent too much time on this damn make-up!::Mike: Lisa, calm down...::Lisa: I am calm!::Mike: So then why are you yellin'?
Roland: Man, why do you always do that? If you want the last piece, why did you ask me if I want the last piece?::Slim: I didn't ask you. But the reason I asked Mike is the same reason you asked Lisa to marry you- it sounds nice, man.
SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION OF Juvenile Jive! (original print ad - many caps)
Jimmy Arnold: Oh, but is he a drip. He's a drizzle of the first water.
Gas Station Attendant: [after patching Jimmy's flat tire] There you are. That's the most amount of tire you can still get legal. Six and a quarter, including labor.::Jimmy Arnold: Six and a quarter for that? Why, there's more rubber on top of a pencil!::Gas Station Attendant: Try riding around on a pencil.
Stacey:
You give me that special feeling boy
I've been awake all night
And there's a beat inside my heart again
It's working over time
Daisy:
No ones moved me in this way before it's all so brand new
You got me so I don't know where I am
Or what I'm gonna do
Frankie:
And I'm ready any time
Automatic high
I've got one thing on my mind
Automatic high
Rochelle:
When I hear you calling out to me
It makes me come alive
Stacey:
And all the fears now seem to fade away
I've kissed the past goodbye
Frankie:
And I'm ready any time
Automatic high
I've got on thing on my mind
Automatic high
Stacey:
Every step every breath every beat
Of my heart comin on like a new sensation
Daisy:
It's just so easy
All:
It's automatic automatic
Stacey:
Automatic
All girls:
High high
High high
Stacey:
Every step every breath every beat
Of my heart comin on like a new sensation
Daisy:
It's just so easy
All:
It's automatic automatic
Stacey:
Automatic
All girls:
High high