I HAVE little sympathy with Lottery winners who moan about their plight, but a few of the stories contained here were at least a little bit convincing.

Cutting Edge does a decent job of persuading a few new muilti-millionaires to talk about what happened to them after they scooped the six-number prize.

“You are just driven into the unknown and it is the unknown that is frightening.”

“You think, what if someone kidnaps the kids?”

“I can count my true friends on one hand.”

“I have had nothing but bad luck ever since.”

These were a few of the comments made by the winners featured here.

Ungrateful gits, I thought, but some had genuine bad luck tales while others were pleased with their wins.

Ray Wragg chose the numbers that won him £7.7 million by picking out car registration numbers while he was driving.

Clearly, that policy could have resulted in an accident but the gamble paid off and the former cladder and wife Barbara are well happy with their new lot.

They’ve given loads to family, friends and charity, been on 26 cruises and bought a new vehicle.

“Every time I get in it I say ‘Look at this, Wraggy’s in a Range Rover’,” says likeable Ray, who is so pleased with his new life that he talks about it on the after dinner circuit.

Tony Well Stubley had just split up with his wife and moved in with another partner when he won a few million.

Unfortunately, he had to give half of it to the ex as part of his divorce proceedings.

Since Wayne Hughes won £1.1 million he has been the subject of threats and had his car nicked.

Paranoia (or is he right to be scared?) has led him to spend quite a lot of his cash on security.

Worst of all, poor old Martin was in for £3 million when he discovered he had lost his ticket.

Frantic searches were carried out, but to no avail.

Various celebrities and then PM Tony Blair’s wife Cherie tried to persuade Camelot to pay up, but it never happened.

Martin’s marriage broke down and he ended up joining a cult in America.

An entertaining programme that made you think.

Me, I’ve still got to decide what to spend that tenner on that I won the other week.