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Real Life

Freddie Flintoff, Davina McCall and Paul Hollywood join It Is A No Brainer campaign

By: Bess Browning

Published: 00:00, 21 April 2016

Updated: 09:07, 09 September 2019

Joan Collins, Liv Tyler and Freddie Flintoff are just some of the A-list names who are supporting a campaign set up in the name of an 11-year-old Kent boy who died from a brain tumour.

It Is A No Brainer asks people to throw on a bandana and smile for the camera.

It has been launched to raise awareness about brain cancer - the biggest killer of children in the UK.

Its inspiration is “bright and beautiful” Silas Pullen who was diagnosed with a malignant and aggressive tumour in August 2012 and spent more than a year having intensive treatment such as operations, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and immunotherapy, but lost his battle in December 2013.

Liv Tyler

His family has since raised more than a staggering £350,000 for the Brain Tumour Charity which directly funds scientific and clinical research into brain tumours.

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Silas’s parents say that there is still not enough research and funding into the disease despite harrowing statistics which place it as the most dangerous condition for children in the UK.

Freddie Flintoff

The Brain Tumour Charity runs an event every year called Bandana Day and produces thousands of the colourful headpieces to spread the word about their work but Silas’s friends and family decided to take the project further.

Silas’s mum Sarah, who lives in Badlesmere with husband Ben and sons Oscar, Rufus and Inigo , said: “A friend of mine Fenella Fox Pitt, whose daughter was at school with Silas, decided she wanted to do something which would raise awareness and was moved by what had happened and how brave Silas was.

Silas Pullen, second from the left, with his brothers.

“It started off with her engaging with farmers, asking them to pose for pictures with the bandanas, and she thought they looked really good and it could be an even bigger idea, engaging people to do something fun which would raise awareness.

“It is not about asking for money. It tells people about Silas’s story, raises awareness about the Brain Tumour Charity and let’s them do something imaginative.

“It has dominoed and we never knew it would be this big. It has all been from word of mouth and friends of friends, someone who knew someone who knew someone, to get all these people involved.”

Baker Paul Hollywood

Other big names who have been snapped for the campaign include TV chef Paul Hollywood, Grand National 2015 winner Many Clouds and trainer Oliver Sherwood, Davina McCall, the ladies of Loose Women and the Queen’s guards at Buckingham Palace.

But Silas’s friends and family have all been involved too, wearing their bandanas with pride.

Sarah added: “Everyone worries about meningitis, but brain cancer kills more children every year, and in this day and age, to have such little treatment available is ludicrous, and even the treatment available is debilitating.

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“I do not want families to go through what we have so I cannot sit back and do nothing.

“We would like to thank the people who have helped us and the people who have supported the Silas Pullen Fund. It’s a way of keeping him here with us.”

To find out more about It Is A No Brainer and Silas’ story, click here or find them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

For more information about the Brain Tumour Charity, visit the website

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