82-year-old Gillian Reynolds has just started a new job as radio critic of The Sunday Times after more than 40 years at the Daily Telegraph. I sat next to her once at an awards dinner and she was fabulous. About 75 at the time, she was bright, funny, contemporary and curious. She made me unafraid of getting old. We shared our dismay at the creative decline of commercial radio into a bland homogeneous “portfolio” of dull, safe, predictably formatted stations playing “ten songs in a row”. The presenters are bland, anonymous and practically interchangeable. And yet it was on commercial radio that people like Chris Tarrant, Kenny Everett, Roger Scott, Pete Tong and Trevor Nelson became big stars. That would never happen now. They’d be forbidden the freedom to flourish. So isn’t it ironic? Video didn’t kill the radio star. Radio did.
A new job at 82.

- Hottest June ...21st Jun 2017
- I love this t...19th Jun 2017
- Sir Billy Con...17th Jun 2017
- Pow!!14th Jun 2017
- Jeremy Corbyn...9th Jun 2017
- Three things ...5th Jun 2017
- It was fifty ...1st Jun 2017
- The Chelsea F...29th May 2017
- RIP Roger Moore24th May 2017
- Save the pray...23rd May 2017
- Crouch End....22nd May 2017
- The LSE.20th May 2017
- We've reached...14th May 2017
- Nike's killer...10th May 2017
- President Mac...8th May 2017 prev next