Yorkshire Post

Murray’s fury over BBC pay gap with younger presenters

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DAME Jenni Murray has told of her fury at “younger, less experience­d” broadcaste­rs earning significan­tly more money than her during her time at the BBC.

Dame Jenni, 70, signed off from her final episode of Woman’s Hour last Thursday, after more than three decades in the presenting chair.

Following her departure from the BBC, she has criticised the corporatio­n’s payment structure, pointing out that neither she nor fellow Woman’s Hour presenter Jane Garvey appeared on the recently published list of those earning more than £ 150,000 a year.

Those who did make the list include breakfast show DJ Zoe Ball. The 49- year- old, who shed a million listeners in her first year on Radio 2, made £ 1.36m in 2019- 20.

Writing in a national newspaper, Barnsley- born Dame Jenni, inset, said it had been “rather more than infuriatin­g to find younger, less experience­d presenters earning twice or even three times as much as me, or the long list of executives on sixfigure salaries with job titles that seem to have precious little to do with broadcasti­ng”.

The veteran presenter said she did not leave the BBC due to ageism and that she decided to depart a year ago because she wanted to be “free of the leash” that had caused her to be “cancelled”.

Dame Jenni said she was “roundly ticked off” for her comments on transgende­r issues and told that she was not allowed to chair any discussion on the subject.

She also said she was barred from covering the 2019 general election due to her opinions on Brexit.

Dame Jenni signed off from Woman’s Hour after 33 years. Ending her broadcast, she told listeners that there are “many, many different stereotype­s that fit our gender, so there is no one stereotypi­cal woman, but our sex, we share”.

The BBC was contacted for comment.

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