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The One Show star Alex Jones hung up on BBC bosses after important question

The One Show star Alex Jones hung up on BBC bosses after important question

Daily Mirror5 hours ago
Alex Jones has been presenting The One Show for over a decade, but she almost turned down the opportunity when she was first offered the job in 2010
Welsh television personality Alex Jones has revealed how she landed her presenting role on The One Show, paying tribute to the programme's Friday host, Chris Evans, for teaching her "everything" about fronting live TV.
Chatting to Mark Wogan on his Spooning podcast, Alex recounted being approached by The One Show producers back in 2010, following the departure of former presenters Adrian Chiles and Christine Lampard.

Initially, she admits she didn't take the phone call about the opportunity seriously, failing to grasp that she was being considered as a potential host.

Believing the BBC simply wanted her to cover a handful of segments, she declined the offer, citing her packed schedule with other commitments: "I was doing a surfing programme, a poker programme, a holiday programme, a fashion programme, and just in general, like, a bit of a chat show as well on BBC Wales. So I was quite busy, and I thought they meant to be a reporter."
But when the caller clarified that Alex was actually being lined up as a potential presenter, she assumed someone was "winding her up" and hung up the phone.
Only afterwards was she convinced the opportunity was legitimate: "We did six weeks of auditions with various people. And ultimately, myself and Jason Manford got the job."
Alex underwent a transformation, swapping her surfer-chick vibe for a more polished look as a tea-time presenter, which coincided with the start of her on-screen partnership with Jason.
She reminisced about their early days in London, where they initially stayed at a swanky hotel in Sloane Square due to not having permanent digs in the city: "Jason and I didn't know anybody in London when we came, so we were like two students...

"We lived in this hotel in Sloane Square, which was so weird. And I remember that shepherd's pie was £37, and we couldn't believe how expensive it was. We were living this funny life where we didn't know anybody.
"And after each show, we'd go to the cinema like two kids, because we didn't know anybody, and we were far away from our families. And then we'd eat this expensive shepherd's pie and complain to the BBC that it was £37 and ask, 'Why aren't you giving us any expenses?'"
However, it was her connection with Chris Evans, who covered for Jason on Fridays, that truly helped her settle in: "I still have a real soft spot for him. And he actually was the one that taught me everything I know."
When Jason departed the programme, Chris took Alex under his wing, showing her the ropes of London's media scene: "We just got on like a house on fire and had the best time. And just every Friday, we'd go out after the show. That's when I sort of settled into London, I think," she fondly recalled.
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Jarvis Cocker records special version of the Shipping Forecast to celebrate its 100th anniversary on the BBC
Jarvis Cocker records special version of the Shipping Forecast to celebrate its 100th anniversary on the BBC

BBC News

time24 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Jarvis Cocker records special version of the Shipping Forecast to celebrate its 100th anniversary on the BBC

Friday 4 July marks 100 years since the first broadcast of the Shipping Forecast on BBC radio on 4 July 1925. To mark the occasion, Jarvis Cocker has recorded a special shipping forecast to be broadcast for an audience at the Crossed Wires Podcast Festival in Sheffield. The festival will welcome 'ships' fans to a special 100th anniversary programme with Radio 4 announcers Lisa Costello and Viji Alles, hosted by Chris Mason. The session is part of BBC Sounds' free Fringe festival with live podcast recordings and exclusive sessions, open to the public. Just two days before Pulp, aka Patchwork, were wowing crowds with a surprise performance at Glastonbury, Cocker was quietly nestled in the BBC Radio 4 studio, reflecting on his love for the Shipping Forecast. Cocker says: 'The Shipping Forecast is something you absorb unconsciously if you live in the UK. It's been on the airwaves for over 100 years… Now technically speaking, it's a weather guide designed to help sailors on the high seas. But it helps people navigate in other ways than that. For instance, for insomniacs, it's a mantra that hopefully helps them drift finally off to sleep.' He says: 'I think it's known around the world as a go-to chill-out thing - before chill-out things were invented, probably.' The Shipping Forecast is preceded by a piece of music called Sailing By. Cocker notably chose this track as one of the eight he would take to a desert island when he appeared on Radio 4's Desert Island Discs in 2005. Cocker says: 'When you listen to Sailing By, it really does feel like life is drifting past you in an extremely pleasant way. A handy go-to sedative to have to hand if you ever happen to become a castaway - or get cut off from normal life for any other reason.' Cocker used to listen whilst going to sleep, citing that 'the repetitive nature' and 'the soothing nature of the person who reads it' helped him to drop off. 'I think it's because it's a routine', he adds, 'it's on every day, so it's something that you can rely on. It's on at a set time, so it gives a bit of stability. And if the rest of your life isn't that stable, it can provide some kind of stability for it. Sailing By was a very relaxing piece of music... I know that a lot of people do use it for that kind of relaxing, almost 'meditation-like' thing.' When asked why he felt the Shipping Forecast was still important, he said: 'I think because even though sometimes it's talking about bad weather conditions and storms and stuff, it's actually an oasis of calm in the day. There's no musical backing to it, it's just a human voice talking to you. Some words, which you don't really know what they mean at all, but the sound of it is comforting and will put you into a nice place.' Cocker said some of his favourite place names include, German Bight – 'for some reason I always think of a cocktail sausage there. I suppose it's because a frankfurter cocktail sausage is a small frank.' - and Hebrides – 'I've actually been to the Hebrides, so that conjures up some kind of real image.' Imagining how the Shipping Forecast might sound in another 100 years, Cocker gave us his best robot impression, suggesting: 'It may be a robot who is saying 'north to northwesterly, occasionally poor.' I hope not. I think it would be better to keep it as a person. Who knows? We don't know what the world's going to look like in 100 years, or whether people will even be in it. If people are still in it, it might all be water. So everybody will be listening to it. It'd be like the number one programme, because everybody will be in a boat. Kevin Costner will be hailed as a seer who knew that we would all become a Water world one day. I don't know. I hope it is. I wouldn't be around to hear it anyway.' The Shipping Forecast is produced by the Met Office on behalf of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) as part of the UK's statutory obligations to provide Maritime Safety Information to seafarers via approved broadcasting methods. The Shipping Forecast is also shared with the BBC for its own broadcast. An online journey through the one-hundred-year history of the Shipping Forecast can be found on the BBC History website. Special anniversary programmes from BBC Radio 4 are available now on BBC Sounds, including The Shipping Forecast: A Beginners Guide with Paddy O'Connell, The Shipping Postcards from continuity announcers, Archive on 4 – The Shipping Forecast at 100: Shipshaped and Soul Music: Sailing By. Listen to The Shipping Forecast on BBC Sounds Watch Pulp's set from Glastonbury on BBC iPlayer PS Follow for more

Oasis' plans for Cardiff just hours before doors open at Principality Stadium
Oasis' plans for Cardiff just hours before doors open at Principality Stadium

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

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Oasis' plans for Cardiff just hours before doors open at Principality Stadium

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Bob Geldof on Live Aid at 40: ‘White saviour? That's nonsense'
Bob Geldof on Live Aid at 40: ‘White saviour? That's nonsense'

Times

timean hour ago

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Bob Geldof on Live Aid at 40: ‘White saviour? That's nonsense'

At 73, Bob Geldof still looks very much the rock star in his leather jacket, shades and unruly mop of hair, now entirely grey. This coming Halloween, his band the Boomtown Rats, formed in his native Dun Laoghaire, south of Dublin, will celebrate their 50th (albeit with a long break) anniversary with a tour. His status as an international aid activist, however, has long eclipsed his late Seventies success as a musician, and we're meeting at Bafta, in Piccadilly, to talk about another anniversary. On July 13 it will be 40 years since the Live Aid gigs in London and Philadelphia, Geldof's follow-up to the Band Aid single he had co-written and co-ordinated the previous Christmas. That had been a response to reading Paul Vallely's reports in The Times, and seeing Michael Buerk's coverage for the BBC, of the devastating famine in northern Ethiopia. The BBC has now made three hour-long documentaries, about Band Aid, Live Aid and its 2005 successor, Live 8. Geldof is at Bafta to watch the second film and speak about it afterwards. I learn in a later phone call that he was not happy with some of the content. In the first film Geldof describes the 'shame and rage' he felt on seeing the pictures of young children starving to death 'in this world of plenty'. It will surprise no one to learn that four decades on, the rage is undimmed. Despite stiff competition in a nation famed for its passion and eloquence, Geldof would still merit selection to talk for Ireland. His conversation is, as we know, urgent, profane and colourful. He is a very bright man with an acute memory and a world-class contacts book, able to access pretty much anyone he thinks can help his cause. A sophisticated campaigner, Geldof is also, which is perhaps less acknowledged, an arch-pragmatist, working across politics to raise money and effect change. 'No business is more ruthlessly focused on the bottom line,' he tells me, 'than rock and roll.' • Tony Blair: Bono and Geldof saved millions of lives with Live Aid For instance, he gives short shrift to critics of Live Aid for not featuring many black artists. There were a fair few African-Americans on stage in Philadelphia but only Sade featured at Wembley. 'The line-up was about getting people who sold millions of records so we could raise millions of pounds. That was my sole criterion when I asked people. There weren't black artists in Britain at that time selling big numbers.' Geldof speaks highly of Andrew Mitchell, the Conservative minister of state for development and Africa, and his former boss, David Cameron, who as prime minister took UK overseas aid spending to 0.7 per cent of GDP. 'Cameron was given the day off from Eton to watch Live Aid. He told me it had influenced a generation. And when I sold my TV company Planet 24 to Michael Green, his PR was a young David Cameron, so I knew him.' He remains in touch with George W Bush, the former Republican president who gave so much money to combat HIV/Aids in Africa after being lobbied by the Bob and Bono double act. Bush appears in the third documentary, chuckling that 'Geldof looked like somebody who'd crawled out from under the ground'. Another indication of Geldof's realism is that he is less scathing than might be supposed about Labour's cuts to the aid budget to fund defence spending. 'Without any question, we need to rearm now. Not in f***ing 2029. Now. Our continent is being invaded now by an arch-thug [Putin]. So that's first.' He also recognises these are grim, ungenerous, pull-up-the-drawbridge times, far different from 2005, the pinnacle of his activism, when after many years of global economic growth the G8 Gleneagles summit agreed to partial debt cancellation and expanded aid for poor countries, thanks in part to 20 years of lobbying by campaigners like Geldof. 'Politics does what it's allowed to do by where society is at. People are very afraid at the moment, there's been a cultural shift. That allows Trump's mayhem on February 1. When Musk just pulled the plug on the USAID websites, instantly 10,000 USAID workers around the world were in serious danger. That allowed everyone else to say 'times are tough'. It's the brute politics of now. So all of this hoopla around this anniversary is frankly odd for me.' Even so, there is no limit to hoopla about Live Aid that someone my age (I was just shy of 21 in July 1985) is willing to hear. Geldof, showman that he is, duly obliges. Part of his critique of the documentary is that it did not include enough footage of the actual music, in London and Philadelphia, given that the standard was so high. 'Why is it remembered so vividly? Because of the link-up with America, and because people felt part of something bigger, but also because it was such a great concert. I don't think the film captured the glory of that.' • Daniel Finkelstein: Band Aid's critics are just feeding cynicism The other factor, I suggest, was that Live Aid was the first time the pop demographic, which in 1985 still largely meant people under the age of 30, had seen Paul McCartney playing Beatles songs. Nowadays, Macca trooping on stage flashing peace signs to close out a big event with Hey Jude or Let It Be is commonplace. In 1985 it was a revelation. 'It was his first time on stage since John died. Linda, Stella and the kids persuaded him to do it. He was driving up from Sussex, listening to U2 on the radio, and they were so good, he was getting really nervous, especially because once he'd said yes, given the hierarchy in pop, with the Beatles unassailable at the top, he had the added burden of closing the show. 'Paul asked me which song he should do and I said Let It Be, because it's a benediction. Then his mic fails and Pete Townshend [Geldof had bounced the Who into appearing by announcing on TV that they were reforming, which was news to them] grabs me from one side and says, 'Let's help him,' and David Bowie grabs me from the other, and with Alison [Moyet] we went out to sing along.' McCartney was not the only nervous superstar that night. 'David Bowie was literally trembling at the side of the stage before his set. Really scared. We were watching the viewing figures and becoming aware of the sheer size of the audience [close to two billion].' Before his performance, earlier on, Geldof had lain on the floor backstage to stretch out his painful back. 'David [Bowie] came by and said, 'What's the matter?' I told him and he said, 'Roll over,' and started massaging me. I'm saying, 'Bit further down, mate,' to David f***ing Bowie!' Geldof doesn't want to be overly critical of the latest documentary. 'But there were too many redundant DJs from the 1980s and some great performances not seen. Elvis Costello riffing on All You Need Is Love, Elton John and George Michael. I don't want to sound self-aggrandising but it was a fabulous gig. And it said, 'Change is possible, there is such a thing as society and for once in our lives, something can work.'' And, as Tony Blair says in the third episode, thanks to Band Aid and Live Aid, 'millions of people are alive today who otherwise wouldn't be'. Geldof still spends at least an hour a day, every day, 'including Sundays', on his role as chair, and one of six trustees, of the Band Aid Charitable Trust. Midge Ure, his co-founder, is another trustee, as is Harvey Goldsmith, who promoted Live Aid. That morning, he had listened to a brief about Somalia from a group asking for $80,000 to remove thousands of goitres [lumps in the neck] caused by iodine deficiency. 'It's amazing how much you can help with comparatively small amounts of money.' One section of the film that impressed me, I say, is how he knew right from the outset that if he went to Ethiopia after the success of Band Aid he would face criticism. The term 'white saviour complex' had yet to be coined in early 1985, when Geldof went to the refugee camps in Tigray, but that is what he was accused of having, then and since. He went because Ken Lennox, the veteran tabloid photographer and a neighbour in London, came round and told him he had to go for the famine to stay in the media spotlight. 'This white saviour thing is bollocks,' he says succinctly. 'It comes from all that 1968 Derrida/Foucault language bollocks. It's nonsense. 'I understood the argument. I was a late 20th-century creature of the media. I'm only in Africa because of television and some guy writing in The Times. The media came to me and said, 'When are you going to Africa?' I said, 'What are you talking about?' They said, 'You have to go.' And I said, 'Why?' And they said, 'Because you're the f***ing story'. 'And I said, 'I'm not the story. People are f***ing dying of no food in a world of surplus food, that's the story.' And they said, 'We can't keep doing the starving child, the starving mother, we've done it, Bob.'' So off he went. That was the moment when the course of his last 40 years was set. What Geldof is seeking, he says, is 'a new rhetoric' to get development back up the agenda. 'For years Britain led the way, the gold standard, soft power in excelsis.' He thinks one way to address concerns is to tackle concerns over immigration. 'What people want to do is stop a thousand people arriving each day on the boats. Fair enough. But Africa is the one continent of population growth. Look at Nigeria: about 240 million people now, the UN says it'll be 350 million by 2050. And those people currently aren't able to find work in the countries where they are. They are going to come. 'Nobody really wants to cross mountains and deserts or get in a rubber tube and try and get across the sea. So we shouldn't dodge this issue. We should say if we help build an economy at the very basic level of health, education and agriculture, and then invest in those economies, it will be good for Britain. It sounds pious and lefty, but it's evidence-based.' This is the essence and appeal of Geldof. So often patronised as a 'give us yer fecking money!' (which he didn't actually say) rabble-rouser, he is in fact a deeply realistic, gradualist, coalition-building expert. He finishes by urging me to go and see Just for One Day, the musical based on Live Aid running in the West End. 'It's a laugh, the music is insane, it's a cartoon and the poor f***er who has to play me, he's a Scouser, he's 6ft 4in, but unbelievably his party piece when he was nine years old, his granny used to make him get up on the kitchen table and do Bob Geldof.' And yes, the real thing is anything but inimitable, yet he is a very special man all the Aid at 40: When Rock'n'Roll Took on the World starts on Sunday, July 6 on BBC2 at 9pm Live Aid turns 40: tell us your best story Set the scene, where were you and how old were you? Then tell us what happened. Please share your response with us in a voice message on WhatsApp. You can reach us at +44 (0)7353096428

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