Charity
Pride Of Britain Awards
2001
"Michaela tells me she's a big fan of mine. Let me tell you l'm her number one fan. We've swapped email addresses and l've got a new friend"
Robbie Williams
Robbie Williams Cancer Advert
This is from a few years ago...
Robbie Williams has joined a campaign to raise awareness about testicular cancer, a disease that kills 11,000 men every year. Robbie's fronting a TV advert for a cancer charity warning of the dangers. The advert looks like a holiday video.

A guy is supposed to be filming his friend on a jetski, but instead he zooms in on the cleavages of several bikin clad girls. A large pair of comedy breasts heave into view, worn by Robbie Williams.

Robbie spoke to Jerry about the campaign: "l have a reason for checking them-which is brilliant. If l'm in a restaurant or a pub, people say to me, " What are you doing, playing with yourself? " And l can say, "l'm not playing with myself, l'm checking for testicular cancer!"

Robbie says that the big challenge was breaking through male apathy: "In Britain we have the total taboo subjects of sex and our own genitalia. We are still very victorian in the way we think, so it has to come across as light hearted-so that people will put their hands down there and check them out before they die."

The people behind the advert agree. Professor Colin Cooper from Everyman campaign says men need to be more aware of their own bodies. "We carried out a MORI poll and what's become clear is that  men don't like talking about health issues."

The advice for men is to check their testicles frequently so that they get to recognise if anything changes. The quicker testicular cancer is found, the higher the chance of a full recovery.

These men admit it's not something they regularly do: "No, l never have. l've never even thought about it."
"Occasionally when l jump out of the bath once in a blue moon."
"l did think l found something and l went to the clinic and it turned out to be negative."
ROBBIE'S WAR ON CHILD SEX TRADE
25th June 2003
Star backs bid to end child trafficking
ROBBIE Williams is to highlight the horrors of child trafficking in a new video.
And yesterday, the chart-topper descrobed the three minute film as "short but definitely not sweet."
Robbie presents More Precious Than Gold and reads out a moving poem which describes the buying and selling of young children for sex work as if they were a crop of fruit.
The hard-hitting film gives a chilling insight into organised crime of child trafficking and was made for UNICEF UK's End Of Child Exploitation campaign.
It will be shown at Robbie's UK and European concerts this summer, on his website and several times a day on satellite music channel MTV.
The singer said: "Over a million children every year are trafficked, transported across borders and exploited on their arrival.
UNICEF want to end  child exploitation and are tackling the problem at source but we need your help.
l sincerely hope you join their campaign to end child exploitation."
UNICEF director Dvid Bull said: "Child Trafficking destroys the lives of children.
Robbie's support will help us raise public awareness about child rights abuse and bring it to an end."
Thousands of children are believed to be trafficked to the UK every year for sex work or hazardous labour.
They come mainly from West Africa, Eastern Europe and Asia.
UNICEF are calling on the govenment to introduce laws to provide specialist care and protection for victims of trafficking, including safe houses, counselling and education.
Robbie's Mozambique Mission
19th May 2000
Robbie is welcomed at at Mozambique HIV centre
Pop singer Robbie Williams has visited a HIV drop-in centre in Mozambique as part of his fact-finding mission to the country.
Over 700 people are infected with HIV every day in the African country, many are children.
The former Take That star visited a centre in the country's capital Maputo in a bid to raise awareness about the problem and more international aid to fight it.
He has made the trip to Mozambique  in his capacity as a "Goodwill Ambassador" for the United Nations' Children's Fund, Unicef.
The BBC's African correspondant Jane Standley is the only journalist to accompany him on his fact-finding mission.
She said his visit to the HIV centre on Friday was designed to highlight the great threat that is known in the country as the silent emergency of Aids.
"His mission  is to break the wall of silence and lend support to the many who are coming to terms with infection," she added.
As well as visiting the centre, he has also been to see how people are recovering from floods that killed hundreds and left one million homeless.
The star had to fly by helicopter to some of the reigns as bridges remain impassable and  fertile fields are still under water three months after the natural disaster struck.
In September 1998, he travelled to Sri Lanka  to help publicise a campaign to rid the country of Polio by taking part in a national immunisation day staged jointly by Unicef and the World Health Organisation.
Along with singer Ian Dury, who died earlier this year, he toured refugee camps and helped give children oral vaccination against the disease
The singer entertained on
a school visit
"No child should have to grow up alone. Help me break the silence on HIV/AIDS. Together we can win the fight!"
Some pics of Robbie doing charity work while l get the stories up..enjoy!