Yorkshire Post

ANOTHER BBC STAR BOWS OUT

Simon Mayo announces he is leaving Radio 2 after 17 years

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IN A move that appeared to have surprised no-one but himself, another of the BBC’s best-known radio hosts joined the queue at the exit door yesterday.

Simon Mayo, a veteran of Radios 1, 2 and 5 Live, had lasted just five months on a show the corporatio­n had “reconfigur­ed” to include a female co-presenter, Jo Whiley.

He was said earlier this month to be in talks with a rival, commercial broadcaste­r, but seemed to have been taken aback when he broke the news to his listeners.

“I’m as surprised at this turn of events as you,” he tweeted, adding that he thought he would be “dragged out aged 120” from the programme that has been his berth since he took it over from Chris Evans in 2010.

“But circumstan­ces change,” he said in a further tweet, and that it had “become increasing­ly tricky” to juggle his radio work with a book deal he had signed.

Mayo, who turned 60 last month, said he would remain at the BBC for the weekly film show he co-hosts on Radio 5 Live with Mark Kermode, but hinted that “other radio adventures beckon”.

His departure from Radio 2, after 17 years on various strands of the station’s output, is the latest in a string of exits and changes across the BBC’s audio networks this year.

Evans announced last month that he was quitting after 13 years, and returning to Virgin Radio, for whom worked nearly 20 years ago. Zoe Ball will take over his breakfast show in December.

On Radio 4, Eddie Mair resigned from the PM programme he had hosted for 20 years, to join the commercial station, LBC. He presented his final show without revealing to listeners that he wasn’t coming back.

Radio 1’s breakfast show was taken over by Greg James, in a job swap with its former host, Nick Grimshaw in August. It was a move that lost a fifth of Grimshaw’s audience, according to listening figures.

The combinatio­n of Mayo and Whiley on Radio 2 has also struggled to attract listeners, with many complainin­g on social media that they preferred its former incarnatio­n with him alone.

But although he was reported earlier to have been “furious” at being “lumbered” with a copresente­r, he denied suggestion­s of a rift and went in to bat for her yesterday, tweeting that the abuse to which she had been subjected on the platform was “appalling”, and adding: “I’ve loved working with the exceptiona­l Jo Whiley and when the show was ‘reconfigur­ed’ she was my first and only choice.”

She will host a new evening show in January from Mondays to Thursdays, while continuing to fill in for Ken Bruce whenever he is away.

She said: “I’m incredibly sad that Simon has decided to leave Radio 2. He’s a brilliant broadcaste­r, a great friend and I really will miss working with him.”

The pair’s departure leaves Sara Cox favourite to take over the early evening slot, with Claudia Winkleman, Graham Norton and Richard Madeley also touted as possible presenters of a potentiall­y rebranded show.

 ??  ??
 ?? PICTURES: LEIGH KEILY/SARAH JEYNES/BBC. ?? OVER AND OUT: Simon Mayo, above left, in his heyday with Radio 1, (PICTURE: TOM PILSTON/THE INDEPENDEN­T/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK) and top, with co-presenter Jo Whiley, joining an exodus that has included veteran DJ Chris Evans, who is making way for Zoe Ball, above right.
PICTURES: LEIGH KEILY/SARAH JEYNES/BBC. OVER AND OUT: Simon Mayo, above left, in his heyday with Radio 1, (PICTURE: TOM PILSTON/THE INDEPENDEN­T/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK) and top, with co-presenter Jo Whiley, joining an exodus that has included veteran DJ Chris Evans, who is making way for Zoe Ball, above right.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom