Jump to content
Unofficial Mills

Recommended Posts

Posted

Considering how Jordan North for several years seemed like the obvious next choice for Breakfast if and when Greg departs, I thought it would be worth thinking about where we are with succession planning now, what everyone’s theories are.  Greg will have been on Breakfast for 6 years this year, it would be unusual if he didn’t leave in the next year or so - I suspect management will want him to stay longer than originally intended now Jordan is gone but you never know. Who does everyone reckon is the frontrunner to take over now Jordan is out of the running?

Taking a quick look at the contenders as I see them: 

Safe pair of hands options:

Rickie, Melvin and Charlie: They’ve done it before, if Greg were to leave this year for example at least you’d know it wouldn’t be a car crash and they’d probably be willing to do it.  Downside is it would probably be a 2 year deal at must and they aren’t getting any younger, aren’t the future of the station etc.  Also a jarring change in style from Greg.

Matt and Mollie: I would have said no chance two weeks ago, but I think they are at least second or third most likely for the gig now.  It’s the same argument as for RMC (if Greg leaves this year they are a good safe option), they fit the style and tone Greg has set so won’t bleed audience majorly, Matt is one of the few remaining DJs of the Jordan/Greg/Scott calibre at this stage (some of the others will reach that point with time and experience I’m sure), Mollie’s personality works on morning radio.  Issue is I don’t know if they’d be willing to commit to it (maybe they’d do it on a 6 month-year contract) and it probably would lean older in terms of appeal than they might want for a fresh Breakfast show.

The gambles:

Sam and Danni: On paper, they could well be the future of the station.  They are young, fit the image radio people to their core, but fundamentally they are just not at that level right now, and it would be a hell of a gamble.  I had them down as the most likely breakfast show AFTER Jordan does it for a few years, maybe lack of options means you have to skip a generation and take the gamble.

Dean McCullough: I know people on here, don’t like this, I don’t like this! But I think at this stage, he may well be the front runner for the show.  The only reason I dismissed this previously was because Jordan was there, Jordan’s departure removes the single biggest roadblock to the inevitable conclusion of his meteoric rise on the station.  it may not be so bad, people will complain and it will be more polarising, but on his own covering breakfast, he sounds solid.  A couple of years and he truly is a personality capable of carrying the Radio 1 Breakfast show.  There are worse options!  Management seems to like him, and that’s a reason in my book, not to dismiss this likelihood.

The Goldilocks choices:

Katie Thistleton:

The more I think about it, the more, I think she’s the ideal candidate.  That doesn’t mean she’d do it, but I don’t think she definitely wouldn’t.  a female presenter would be a breath of fresh air, she’s genuinely good at connecting with audiences in the way. Greg and Scott and Jordan can, she would need more content than she currently does on her show and probably a co-presenter, but should be more than capable of anchoring the slot and it could be really successful.  

Jack Saunders:

Hear me out. He’s young, but he’s been on the radio for years. He always sounds in control no matter what show he is on.  Great interviewer, strong personality, not too polarising.  He would probably switch people off in the way Grimshaw did, but thats never stopped breakfast presenters being picked.  it could be something exciting and fresh and genuinely compete with Capital if it was done properly.  on the other hand, it could be an absolute disaster, really depends how it was structured.  
 

those are my thoughts, over to you.

 


Posted

One who I wouldn’t be surprised to leave in the near future is Arielle. She never does cover shifts anymore and now we’re at the stage where Sam and Danni are picked over her.

Posted
11 minutes ago, R1Fan1 said:

One who I wouldn’t be surprised to leave in the near future is Arielle. She never does cover shifts anymore and now we’re at the stage where Sam and Danni are picked over her.

Safe pair of hands.

Posted
1 hour ago, GeekTalk51 said:

Considering how Jordan North for several years seemed like the obvious next choice for Breakfast if and when Greg departs, I thought it would be worth thinking about where we are with succession planning now, what everyone’s theories are.  Greg will have been on Breakfast for 6 years this year, it would be unusual if he didn’t leave in the next year or so - I suspect management will want him to stay longer than originally intended now Jordan is gone but you never know. Who does everyone reckon is the frontrunner to take over now Jordan is out of the running?

Taking a quick look at the contenders as I see them: 

Safe pair of hands options:

Rickie, Melvin and Charlie: They’ve done it before, if Greg were to leave this year for example at least you’d know it wouldn’t be a car crash and they’d probably be willing to do it.  Downside is it would probably be a 2 year deal at must and they aren’t getting any younger, aren’t the future of the station etc.  Also a jarring change in style from Greg.

Matt and Mollie: I would have said no chance two weeks ago, but I think they are at least second or third most likely for the gig now.  It’s the same argument as for RMC (if Greg leaves this year they are a good safe option), they fit the style and tone Greg has set so won’t bleed audience majorly, Matt is one of the few remaining DJs of the Jordan/Greg/Scott calibre at this stage (some of the others will reach that point with time and experience I’m sure), Mollie’s personality works on morning radio.  Issue is I don’t know if they’d be willing to commit to it (maybe they’d do it on a 6 month-year contract) and it probably would lean older in terms of appeal than they might want for a fresh Breakfast show.

The gambles:

Sam and Danni: On paper, they could well be the future of the station.  They are young, fit the image radio people to their core, but fundamentally they are just not at that level right now, and it would be a hell of a gamble.  I had them down as the most likely breakfast show AFTER Jordan does it for a few years, maybe lack of options means you have to skip a generation and take the gamble.

Dean McCullough: I know people on here, don’t like this, I don’t like this! But I think at this stage, he may well be the front runner for the show.  The only reason I dismissed this previously was because Jordan was there, Jordan’s departure removes the single biggest roadblock to the inevitable conclusion of his meteoric rise on the station.  it may not be so bad, people will complain and it will be more polarising, but on his own covering breakfast, he sounds solid.  A couple of years and he truly is a personality capable of carrying the Radio 1 Breakfast show.  There are worse options!  Management seems to like him, and that’s a reason in my book, not to dismiss this likelihood.

The Goldilocks choices:

Katie Thistleton:

The more I think about it, the more, I think she’s the ideal candidate.  That doesn’t mean she’d do it, but I don’t think she definitely wouldn’t.  a female presenter would be a breath of fresh air, she’s genuinely good at connecting with audiences in the way. Greg and Scott and Jordan can, she would need more content than she currently does on her show and probably a co-presenter, but should be more than capable of anchoring the slot and it could be really successful.  

Jack Saunders:

Hear me out. He’s young, but he’s been on the radio for years. He always sounds in control no matter what show he is on.  Great interviewer, strong personality, not too polarising.  He would probably switch people off in the way Grimshaw did, but thats never stopped breakfast presenters being picked.  it could be something exciting and fresh and genuinely compete with Capital if it was done properly.  on the other hand, it could be an absolute disaster, really depends how it was structured.  
 

those are my thoughts, over to you.

 

 

I think Jack Saunders would be a more wildcard than Dean and would be a gamble that would play off allowing the breakfast show kmaube to be playing fresh new music and giving space to reinvent the space of the breakfast show.

Had it been that Greg James left yesterday and effectively say I wont be returning and serving my notice Matt & Mollie would likely have spent few months potentially until August or September in the job. 

Dean McCullough seems that if Aled were to be the person to select the next breakfast host of who he’d likely try to go for.

I think it would be absolutely the right opportunity to retain Katie would have her do breakfast show it. Since now it’s been 20 years since the last female breakfast show host it would be good to have a a non male host to take over the show.  

Posted
5 hours ago, GeekTalk51 said:

Considering how Jordan North for several years seemed like the obvious next choice for Breakfast if and when Greg departs, I thought it would be worth thinking about where we are with succession planning now, what everyone’s theories are.  Greg will have been on Breakfast for 6 years this year, it would be unusual if he didn’t leave in the next year or so - I suspect management will want him to stay longer than originally intended now Jordan is gone but you never know. Who does everyone reckon is the frontrunner to take over now Jordan is out of the running?

Taking a quick look at the contenders as I see them: 

Safe pair of hands options:

Rickie, Melvin and Charlie: They’ve done it before, if Greg were to leave this year for example at least you’d know it wouldn’t be a car crash and they’d probably be willing to do it.  Downside is it would probably be a 2 year deal at must and they aren’t getting any younger, aren’t the future of the station etc.  Also a jarring change in style from Greg.

Matt and Mollie: I would have said no chance two weeks ago, but I think they are at least second or third most likely for the gig now.  It’s the same argument as for RMC (if Greg leaves this year they are a good safe option), they fit the style and tone Greg has set so won’t bleed audience majorly, Matt is one of the few remaining DJs of the Jordan/Greg/Scott calibre at this stage (some of the others will reach that point with time and experience I’m sure), Mollie’s personality works on morning radio.  Issue is I don’t know if they’d be willing to commit to it (maybe they’d do it on a 6 month-year contract) and it probably would lean older in terms of appeal than they might want for a fresh Breakfast show.

The gambles:

Sam and Danni: On paper, they could well be the future of the station.  They are young, fit the image radio people to their core, but fundamentally they are just not at that level right now, and it would be a hell of a gamble.  I had them down as the most likely breakfast show AFTER Jordan does it for a few years, maybe lack of options means you have to skip a generation and take the gamble.

Dean McCullough: I know people on here, don’t like this, I don’t like this! But I think at this stage, he may well be the front runner for the show.  The only reason I dismissed this previously was because Jordan was there, Jordan’s departure removes the single biggest roadblock to the inevitable conclusion of his meteoric rise on the station.  it may not be so bad, people will complain and it will be more polarising, but on his own covering breakfast, he sounds solid.  A couple of years and he truly is a personality capable of carrying the Radio 1 Breakfast show.  There are worse options!  Management seems to like him, and that’s a reason in my book, not to dismiss this likelihood.

The Goldilocks choices:

Katie Thistleton:

The more I think about it, the more, I think she’s the ideal candidate.  That doesn’t mean she’d do it, but I don’t think she definitely wouldn’t.  a female presenter would be a breath of fresh air, she’s genuinely good at connecting with audiences in the way. Greg and Scott and Jordan can, she would need more content than she currently does on her show and probably a co-presenter, but should be more than capable of anchoring the slot and it could be really successful.  

Jack Saunders:

Hear me out. He’s young, but he’s been on the radio for years. He always sounds in control no matter what show he is on.  Great interviewer, strong personality, not too polarising.  He would probably switch people off in the way Grimshaw did, but thats never stopped breakfast presenters being picked.  it could be something exciting and fresh and genuinely compete with Capital if it was done properly.  on the other hand, it could be an absolute disaster, really depends how it was structured.  
 

those are my thoughts, over to you.

 

 

I think the safest and most logical bet would be Matt and Mollie 100%. I know there’s been a lot of conversation around the length of time Matt has been at the station now, but I would say aside from Greg they are the most high-profile/popular presenters with current listeners and much younger potential new listeners. They did the Reading and Leeds coverage last year, which as an event is the pinnacle of youth culture in the UK in my opinion. In addition, they’ve both got young kids which I actually think benefits them in staying closer to pop culture than other presenters. Aside from that they have the right playful presenting style for the station which I just couldn’t see working on any other BBC station atm. Anecdotally, the most popular known presenters remaining with teenage relatives are Greg, followed by Matt & Mollie by far. The question will be whether Matt and Mollie themselves want to stay/have the gig from a practical perspective - no doubt they’ll be getting very lucrative offers from Global/Bauer in due course which may also fit better with their personal circumstances. I wouldn’t be surprised if we see them leaving this year off their own accord for commercial radio somewhere.

My next choice would be Sam & Danni - I really think they are incredible broadcasters with a wide appeal. Both very likeable people as well. Would be a huge risk though, given they’re not well known, not based in London/Manchester and haven’t had that level of responsibility yet. I see they’ve got the Going Home slot next week which is a big thing for them and no doubt going to be watched closely by bosses for future opportunities. I reckon that Vick leaves end of the summer and they get the Drive Time slot from Cardiff first though.

My gut feeling is that Dean would get it by himself if Greg left anytime soon - he seems popular with Radio 1 bosses atm, is based at Media City in Manchester and it would be great optics for the BBC to have the first Radio 1 breakfast show from outside London in the second city. He’s also much less likely to want to move to London and have other commercial radio options I would guess - seems pretty settled in Manchester. I’ve actually warmed more to Dean recently but mostly when he’s by himself. Would certainly be divisive with the audience but he seems thick-skinned enough to take any backlash.

Overall, I reckon the bosses main goal will be to make sure they keep Greg for as long as possible over the next few years, whilst they think about where to go next. Greg is still sounding as fresh as ever and with Jordan taking Capital breakfast they’ll want to have as strong a competition as possible for a few years.

That being said, there definitely needs to be a complete overhaul/review of who they want Radio 1 to appeal to before making any big decisions though. The station is simply not sustainable with its “historic” target audience in the current market and music industry. Like it or not, there just isn’t that pipeline of younger listeners that there was 5-10 years ago and bringing in an influencer/TikToker with no radio experience to host a flagship show won’t change that.

Posted
23 minutes ago, Jbb said:

I think the safest and most logical bet would be Matt and Mollie 100%. I know there’s been a lot of conversation around the length of time Matt has been at the station now, but I would say aside from Greg they are the most high-profile/popular presenters with current listeners and much younger potential new listeners. They did the Reading and Leeds coverage last year, which as an event is the pinnacle of youth culture in the UK in my opinion. In addition, they’ve both got young kids which I actually think benefits them in staying closer to pop culture than other presenters. Aside from that they have the right playful presenting style for the station which I just couldn’t see working on any other BBC station atm. Anecdotally, the most popular known presenters remaining with teenage relatives are Greg, followed by Matt & Mollie by far. The question will be whether Matt and Mollie themselves want to stay/have the gig from a practical perspective - no doubt they’ll be getting very lucrative offers from Global/Bauer in due course which may also fit better with their personal circumstances. I wouldn’t be surprised if we see them leaving this year off their own accord for commercial radio somewhere.

My next choice would be Sam & Danni - I really think they are incredible broadcasters with a wide appeal. Both very likeable people as well. Would be a huge risk though, given they’re not well known, not based in London/Manchester and haven’t had that level of responsibility yet. I see they’ve got the Going Home slot next week which is a big thing for them and no doubt going to be watched closely by bosses for future opportunities. I reckon that Vick leaves end of the summer and they get the Drive Time slot from Cardiff first though.

My gut feeling is that Dean would get it by himself if Greg left anytime soon - he seems popular with Radio 1 bosses atm, is based at Media City in Manchester and it would be great optics for the BBC to have the first Radio 1 breakfast show from outside London in the second city. He’s also much less likely to want to move to London and have other commercial radio options I would guess - seems pretty settled in Manchester. I’ve actually warmed more to Dean recently but mostly when he’s by himself. Would certainly be divisive with the audience but he seems thick-skinned enough to take any backlash.

Overall, I reckon the bosses main goal will be to make sure they keep Greg for as long as possible over the next few years, whilst they think about where to go next. Greg is still sounding as fresh as ever and with Jordan taking Capital breakfast they’ll want to have as strong a competition as possible for a few years.

That being said, there definitely needs to be a complete overhaul/review of who they want Radio 1 to appeal to before making any big decisions though. The station is simply not sustainable with its “historic” target audience in the current market and music industry. Like it or not, there just isn’t that pipeline of younger listeners that there was 5-10 years ago and bringing in an influencer/TikToker with no radio experience to host a flagship show won’t change that.

I think that they wont get young people as posturing as TikTok radio Radio 1 on TikTok and social media let loose and have the content creators and influencer popular content marketing things on those platforms exclusively and not on air.

I think r that as you said an overhaul needs to happen and not seeing it as a populist station but keeping things as new fresh new music. I think Greg will go on his own and that would be his own choice.

I do think by now the station could do with new management and a different direction. I said the other day even if it lost two thirds of its audience current audience lost it would still do considerably well. It’s just not going to be as big. A review is something of which is plausible in the near future if any reform in the corporations funding model is considered and when the charter is up for review and needs renewal.

If I was to speculate where Matt & Mollie could be best suited is Hits Radio a presenter like Matt will be able to bring some of the entertainment features and ideas that what when Ken Bruce and Simon Mayo joined Greatest Hits Radio had to bring with him. With Mollie’s pop music knowledge and credentials of being from a girl band had hosted music documentaries for radio 1 and supported new pop acts think they could be the big radio names a station like Hits Radio are desperately lacking.

Posted

I wonder if Lauren Layfield will play a major role at some point this year too? If she has signed for radio 1 which seems like a strong possibility, they surely must have promised her some kind of major show for her to leave Capital’s Early Breakfast show? 
 

I do wonder if her and Katie together somewhere might be an option? Not sure I can see it being Breakfast but definitely somewhere else on the schedule 

Posted
21 minutes ago, Dan18F1 said:

I wonder if Lauren Layfield will play a major role at some point this year too? If she has signed for radio 1 which seems like a strong possibility, they surely must have promised her some kind of major show for her to leave Capital’s Early Breakfast show? 
 

I do wonder if her and Katie together somewhere might be an option? Not sure I can see it being Breakfast but definitely somewhere else on the schedule 

Yes can’t see breakfast. Unless there was situation where her contract wasn’t renewed or if she wanted a change from the early wake ups and working in a more flexible less permanent work schedule temporary to see other projects television and opportunities to cover and appear on some radio programmes much like Yinka Bokinni. I guess time will tell.

Posted

What a great thread this is. And i cannot see what the vision is anymore. I cannot believe they would let Jordan go. I fo want to hear more of the young talent see what they can offer as that will tell the story. Big fan of Sam&Danni get more like them i am sure the station will be fine. 

Greg surely now stays longer than expected because they have nobody there to rival Capital Breakfast. Time to really find out who is the best of this bunch Radio 1 get on it!

Posted

To copy what I posted in the other thread:

1) If Greg were to go shortly, Matt & Mollie would be the ready-made fit. Consistently passed over for daytime (and that's just Matt & Mollie - Matt has been biding his time for well over a decade) and one of the more popular pairings remaining.

Though the obvious issue is Matt in particular feels very much near the end of his time at Radio 1 now (despite sounding as good as ever) so it's not exactly an option for the future. But they are two recognisable names and still popular with the Radio 1 audience and would stand out in the popular breakfast radio marketplace while Radio 1 decide what to do next

2) Katie Thistleton. Ideally you'd maybe want her with Vick but Vick seems to firmly not want to be on Breakfast. Radio 1 haven't had a female breakfast DJ for years and Katie is very popular with the audience. She's been 'supply teacher' for years and been the go-to cover so much on Going Home that she's no doubt familiar to most Radio 1 listeners. There is the London issue - she seems to be pretty happy based in Manchester - but Radio 1 already do daily shows from Manchester and what better way to show the BBC broadcasts from 'across the UK' then doing the Breakfast show outside London and they already do the TV show outside London and it's still popular.

3) Dean McCollough. He seems to be a bit of a 'golden child' at the minute and he's already covered Breakfast. Wouldn't shock me if he gets the gig next. That said is he high profile enough for such a big role and reaction to him seems mixed at best (he's arguably more popular on here than on socials) and there's already a feeling he's been promoted too far too soon and put on Breakfast and that's supercharged. Plus if Manchester is a reason to not choose Katie the same applies for Dean surely.

4)RMC. They have experiencing hosting Breakfast from Kiss so would do a capable job no doubt. But also much like Matt & Mollie not exactly ones for the future and would be a stopgap surely.

5) Sam & Danni - in a few years probably great choices for Breakfast. But they're barely started on Weekend Breakfast and probably need a little time to develop and are they high profile enough yet with the weekday audience? You'd be forgiven as a casual listener for not being aware of them.

6) Somebody else. Let's face it not many of us would've seen Jamie Laing getting a big role like Drive a few years ago - or even a few days ago - and certainly his previous Radio 1 appearances don't merit it. So anybody could be on the table now whether it's a hire from commercial radio or just a 'celeb' (see some of the Global & Bauer stations for example). While I don't want to put this energy out there, Scarlett Moffatt like Jamie did a Radio 1 podcast once upon a time so who's to say she won't follow the Jamie Laing path and get a massive role out of nowhere (goodness I hope I'm wrong though).

Posted

It’s no secret that Matt and Mollie are my favs and would be the best breakfast show replacements. That said, they both struggle with early mornings, have kids too so who knows if that’s what they’d want. I think they’d want drive or afternoon. But they have a lot of good games, they’re very popular - even more so than the weekday DJs. 
 

I can’t believe I’m about to say this but Dean actually sounds far better than he ever has when he subbed in recently for Greg. He wasn’t annoying and actually seemed a polish DJ. He might be the new host as Aled thinks the demographic like him but he is universally disliked across all platforms. If he tones down the attention seeking and gets a good producer then he might be worth listening to. 

Posted
18 minutes ago, Sara97 said:

I can’t believe I’m about to say this but Dean actually sounds far better than he ever has when he subbed in recently for Greg. He wasn’t annoying and actually seemed a polish DJ. He might be the new host as Aled thinks the demographic like him but he is universally disliked across all platforms. If he tones down the attention seeking and gets a good producer then he might be worth listening to. 

I agree that Dean has probably never sounded better than his Breakfast stand-ins but there is nothing about him that makes me think he is the most worthy DJ in the country to get one of the top gigs...  He might not have been annoying on these stand-ins but there was nothing special about them either.

Even at this early stage in their careers Sam and Danni would be much better or possibly even Jack Saunders if he wanted to go away from specialist.  My preference would be Katie solo at this stage.

Or somebody from outside.

It won't be Matt and Mollie or RMC at this stage in their careers and realistically it seems unlikely Vick Hope will be there in the long-term.

Up to Friday my prediction would have been Jordan (alone or partnered) to take over Breakfast in the next year, do only a few years - say 4 max - and Sam and Danni next. 

But Radio 1 has played wildcards before - Grimmy wasn't the obvious replacement for Moyles.

Posted

Totally agree with the above that those are the next in line for the breakfast shows. I'd say potentially Dean is the favourite at the moment if Greg was to go tomorrow. It's clear the Aled and other management like him.

I think Katie is also a very strong contender for something more and a move up to weekday daytimes, subject to where the show is allowed to come from and also if the guesses of Jamie Laing being a decision just for the time being are correct.

 

One thing that I have noticed. With Jordan now gone to a rival station, and this already being predicted on here for further into 2024, I think there's an even greater chance we'll see James Cusack land a full time show and here's why.

There was a gap at R1 when Chris Stark left, for the down to earth bloke character, but now the entire 'Jordan north Northern male figure on Radio 1' has literally vanished overnight and not only that it's been erased. Worse still they've both gone to the main competitor.

He's now the only northern male they have and I've said before he reminds me of the Jordan of a few years ago. There has also been a pretty huge backlash about the drive gig going to a posh boy and the BBC seems to react to politics.

That all aside, they'd be stupid not to give James a full time show somewhere on the station as he is the relatable, funny, down to earth guy from the north and above all he's been excellent on radio 1 each time he's covered. He's outshone many other cover presenters with what he does in his shows and original features. We often comment how light some shows can be and he makes it sound dead easy. Think you could outrun a bear? was not only funny but original and even mates at work who have 0 interest in radio commented on it and it got them talking. His duo shows with Mollie King in November I think it was were also strong for first shows.

From socials it looks like he's been doing more with Global including Capital and then the other week on his story doing what looked like some network shifts plus Heart 00's. He's not a big name granted, but he's a steal from them.

When they're bringing in the likes of Jamie Laing and with Jordan gone, it's left a huge gap even more so for someone like Cusack to scoop up some northern listeners who relate to him and even charm some southern ones. That's my thinking anyway.

Posted
39 minutes ago, ianwilk1999 said:

Totally agree with the above that those are the next in line for the breakfast shows. I'd say potentially Dean is the favourite at the moment if Greg was to go tomorrow. It's clear the Aled and other management like him.

I think Katie is also a very strong contender for something more and a move up to weekday daytimes, subject to where the show is allowed to come from and also if the guesses of Jamie Laing being a decision just for the time being are correct.

 

One thing that I have noticed. With Jordan now gone to a rival station, and this already being predicted on here for further into 2024, I think there's an even greater chance we'll see James Cusack land a full time show and here's why.

There was a gap at R1 when Chris Stark left, for the down to earth bloke character, but now the entire 'Jordan north Northern male figure on Radio 1' has literally vanished overnight and not only that it's been erased. Worse still they've both gone to the main competitor.

He's now the only northern male they have and I've said before he reminds me of the Jordan of a few years ago. There has also been a pretty huge backlash about the drive gig going to a posh boy and the BBC seems to react to politics.

That all aside, they'd be stupid not to give James a full time show somewhere on the station as he is the relatable, funny, down to earth guy from the north and above all he's been excellent on radio 1 each time he's covered. He's outshone many other cover presenters with what he does in his shows and original features. We often comment how light some shows can be and he makes it sound dead easy. Think you could outrun a bear? was not only funny but original and even mates at work who have 0 interest in radio commented on it and it got them talking. His duo shows with Mollie King in November I think it was were also strong for first shows.

From socials it looks like he's been doing more with Global including Capital and then the other week on his story doing what looked like some network shifts plus Heart 00's. He's not a big name granted, but he's a steal from them.

When they're bringing in the likes of Jamie Laing and with Jordan gone, it's left a huge gap even more so for someone like Cusack to scoop up some northern listeners who relate to him and even charm some southern ones. That's my thinking anyway.

Think James would work as he was a figure who would be at the starting point of his career much like Jordan North worked hard willing to climb the radio ladder by doing most work offered and learning on the job. What works for a presenter on radio 1 is not being made as a household name or a person before joining the station but becoming one by working at the station. 

The station would need to move quick if Global are giving their national brands much more variety in accents and voices from across the UK in hopes to boost its listenership outside of London. 

I think for Heart 00’s it would be good to have them give Chris Stark a weekly playlisted show even if it is voice tracked and think some of their playlist stations could do with that Ashton Merrigold was on Heart 00’s creating some presenter hosted shows on Global’s spin-offs could help them to boost listener figures and increase listenership on Global Player. So desperate for a re-design 

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Posts

    • “It’s Christmas in a week and a day.” “I’ve never watched Love Actually… and I’ve been blagging it for years.” “This is not a band performing — this is a celebration.” Scott Mills powered into Wednesday with that very specific pre-Christmas confidence — the kind where half the country is quietly clocking off while pretending to still be productive. He called out the “Tina Dehealy energy” of people secretly on their final working day, invited smug voice notes, and immediately set the tone as warm, mischievous and deeply festive. With Ellie Brennan on travel and Stefan Powell alongside him, Scott revelled in Christmas traditions, from playing Wrap Myself in Paper exactly one week and a day before Christmas to continuing the national reckoning over his Love Actually confession. The show felt like a shared countdown, equal parts silliness, comfort and ritual Pause for Thought: Ashley John-Baptiste Ashley John-Baptiste delivered one of the most moving Pause for Thought moments of the week, reflecting on Christmas through the lens of growing up in foster care. He shared a vivid memory of being five years old, living with a much-loved foster mum who was the heart of her community, famous for her Christmas Day rice and peas and jerk chicken — “no time for dry turkey.” His story centred on Christmas morning and a longed-for Nintendo Game Boy, mirroring the one given to his foster mum’s grandson, and the quiet fear that came with wondering whether he mattered as much. Ashley described the moment he realised there was also a Game Boy under the tree for him, and how that gift symbolised belonging, love and equality. He spoke powerfully about the joy his foster mum took in giving, suggesting that the act of generosity meant as much to her as the gift did to him. His reflection gently encouraged listeners to think about how small acts — a smile, time, encouragement — can mean everything at Christmas. Scott thanked him sincerely, clearly moved, as the studio fell into that rare, thoughtful silence that only Pause for Thought brings. Strictly Finalists: Karen Carney and Carlos Gu Karen Carney and Carlos Gu joined Scott fresh from the Strictly bubble, and the relief of hearing Christmas music for the first time in weeks was immediately apparent. Karen admitted she hadn’t even put her tree up yet, laughing that Strictly completely takes over your sense of time and reality. Scott loved how Karen analyses her dances when chatting to Claudia — likening it to post-match football punditry — something Karen blamed on her sporting background and instinct to break everything down. Karen spoke candidly about the physical and mental demands of the show, admitting she’s actually fitter now than when she retired from football. She revealed she’s gained muscle during the series and praised the pros as elite athletes, highlighting their strength, grace and stamina. Carlos, in turn, described Karen as the dream partner — relentlessly hardworking, always giving more than asked, and utterly committed in the rehearsal room. Their mutual respect and affection was palpable. The conversation turned emotional when discussing their near-perfect waltz to Whitney Houston’s One Moment in Time. Karen admitted ballroom had always scared her, but this dance was about showing elegance she didn’t know she had. She described it as a moment just for them — not for family, not for tribute — but for their partnership. Carlos explained that for the final, his only wish is for Karen to fully enjoy the experience, calling it “a once in a lifetime moment.” The Zero Percent Club and Quiz Redemption The Easiest Quiz continued its festive redemption arc with Mark from Wiltshire, returning after his infamous zero-point performance involving Peppa Pig, Hey Duggee and Mr Tumble. Mark revealed the ripple effect of his original appearance — Peppa Pig advent calendars, workplace posters, and relentless teasing — all of which Scott delighted in. Determined to put things right, Mark powered through the quiz, navigating everything from archaeology to nativity animals with calm confidence. Despite some controversial moments — including colourful beetles and regional geography — Mark soared to an impressive 32 points. Scott celebrated the comeback as one of the Zero Percent Club’s greatest success stories so far, turning past humiliation into full festive triumph. It was classic Breakfast Show storytelling: kind, funny, and deeply satisfying. Boyzone: Ronan, Shane and Keith Take Over Boyzone’s arrival after 8.30 felt like a genuine radio event. Ronan Keating, Shane Lynch and Keith Duffy filled the studio with 90s nostalgia and warmth, immediately transporting listeners back to bedrooms plastered with posters and cassette players on repeat. Scott reminded them that it was on this very show that a comeback had first been teased — and now it was real, with two huge “One for the Road” shows booked at the Emirates Stadium. Ronan explained that these concerts aren’t about perfection, but celebration. Shane summed it up perfectly, describing the shows as a shared moment between band and fans — a massive after-party marking what Boyzone meant to people’s lives. The band reflected on how different fandom feels now, compared to the intense loyalty of the 90s when you were either Boyzone or Take That, never both. They shared behind-the-scenes stories from their early years, from crammed dressing rooms to Shane revealing he’s kept entire stages from old tours — now stored in what Scott dubbed “the Boyzone Museum.” The chat was full of laughter, warmth and affectionate ribbing, especially around Ronan’s presenting nerves on The One Show the night before. Scott finally delivered on his promise to play Love Me For A Reason, sending the studio — and listeners — into full nostalgia mode. Messages flooded in from fans remembering dancing in their childhood bedrooms, cassette players in hand. The lads also discussed Ronan’s New Year’s Eve BBC One show, featuring surprise Boyzone appearances, before Scott thanked them for decades of memories and the unmistakable joy they still bring. James King’s Christmas Movie Rescue Mission Determined to rehabilitate his festive credibility, Scott welcomed film expert James King for a rapid-fire guide to essential Christmas films. James didn’t hold back, starting with It’s a Wonderful Life, before tackling Die Hard, Elf, Home Alone and, of course, The Muppet Christmas Carol. Scott leaned into the conversation, openly admitting his love for cheesy Christmas films involving secret princes, small towns and stressed executives in red coats. James introduced Champagne Problems, a modern festive romcom complete with Paris, romance and Taylor Swift-adjacent vibes, which Scott immediately embraced. The pair discussed why Christmas films matter — familiarity, warmth, redemption and that comforting sense of knowing everything will be okay by the end. James plugged his A–Z of Christmas Films on BBC Sounds, proudly confirming Scott himself appears on the “C for Cheesy” episode. Magnus Carlsen Day and the Vernon Kay Handover The emotional peak of the morning arrived with the annual playing of Wrap Myself in Paper — Scott’s sacred Christmas tradition, exactly one week and a day before Christmas. Long-time listeners, families and even grandchildren joined in, sharing stories of how the song has become part of their festive rituals. Scott treated it with the reverence it deserves, knowing this is one of those moments that defines his show for fans. As the show wrapped up, Vernon Kay arrived for the handover, immediately bonding over Christmas films — including a passionate defence of Arthur Christmas. Scott teased Thursday’s guest, Timothée Chalamet. The post 17 December 2025: Smug Last-Days-at-Work Vibes first appeared on Unofficial Mills.View the full article
    • Yeah if it is proper flu that can knock you out for two weeks sometimes.
    • I had Covid back in September took me best part of a week to be able to do things again this flu that’s going round is bad so radio 1 might have told him to stay off 
    • I would assume Sam and Danni as well
    • I hope Dean’s ok, he’ll have been off all week!
    • Sam and Danni now in for Greg this Friday with Lauren and Conor in for them. Dean must not be feeling better yet.
    • I have a feeling that Vick Hope will leave next year and Emil will present Going Home with Katie & Jamie whenever he turns up
    • “I have to speak my truth… I’ve never watched Love Actually.” “Mary Berry says you should get up and get dressed.” “If you don’t feel festive after this, you have a cold heart.” Tuesday Energy, Festive Voices and the Walking in the Air Takeover Scott Mills leaned fully into Tuesday morning with warmth, mischief and maximum Christmas spirit. Still dealing with the fallout from his Love Actually confession, Scott opened by sharing listener reactions as the mailbag continued to “bulge”, with emails ranging from polite disappointment to outright disbelief. Ellie Brennan and Stefan Powell were firmly in the mix, keeping the show grounded with travel, news and gentle teasing, while Scott embraced his role as festive chaos conductor. The tone was set early when Scott encouraged listeners to send in their attempts at Walking in the Air, insisting he “wasn’t asking” but absolutely loving that everyone did anyway. What followed was a surprisingly emotional and hilarious parade of voice notes. From warm-ups involving “minimal animal” to unexpectedly operatic performances, Scott treated each effort like a West End audition. One listener’s vibrato stopped him in his tracks, while another was invited to “warm up properly and try again later”. It was a classic Scott Mills segment — inclusive, silly, and joyful — with the added bonus that it paved the way for one of the day’s biggest guests later on. Pause for Thought: Solitude, Christmas and Being Fully Yourself Tuesday’s Pause for Thought came from Governor B and landed with real emotional weight. Reflecting on Christmas, identity and the idea of “two halves of life”, he spoke honestly about shedding old masks and learning to live more authentically. He shared that this Christmas morning he’ll go for a solo run before picking up his children, explaining that being alone doesn’t always mean being lonely — sometimes it means peace. Scott listened intently, clearly moved, and thanked him warmly afterwards, while listeners texted in to say the words had made them cry and rethink their own festive routines. Strictly Finalists: George and Alexis George Clarke and Alexis Charleston joined Scott live in the studio ahead of the Strictly Come Dancing final, and the excitement was unmistakable. Scott began by locking eyes with George and saying the words out loud: “You’re in the Strictly final.” George laughed in disbelief, admitting it still didn’t feel real and joking they must have “got the wrong George.” With no prior dance or performance experience, George reflected on how surreal the journey has been, especially learning not just the steps but how to command a stage — something Scott was keen to praise repeatedly. Alexis spoke with pride about George’s transformation, describing the early hesitancy and overthinking that gradually gave way to confidence and trust. She pinpointed a turning point when George stopped analysing every move and started fully committing emotionally. Scott related deeply, sharing his own memories of learning to dance and how vulnerable it feels when performance isn’t your natural comfort zone. The partnership between the two felt genuine, affectionate and supportive — exactly the sort of dynamic Strictly fans love to root for. Family came up often, with George sharing how meaningful it’s been for his grandparents and parents to watch him on a show they truly understand. Scott joked that radio success never quite impresses grandparents, but Strictly absolutely does. Listener messages poured in calling George “what Strictly is all about”, leaving him visibly touched and slightly embarrassed. Alexis added that what audiences see is exactly who George is off-camera — kind, genuine and thoughtful — a comment Scott wholeheartedly agreed with. The conversation moved on to the final itself, with three dances looming and hopes of a perfect 40 still alive. Alexis admitted she’s “manifesting it” and jokingly suggested twerking again if that’s what it takes to win Craig over. Scott loved the optimism, teasing that anything is possible on final week. Talk of the Strictly tour followed, with Scott reminiscing about his own experience and warning George that tears at the end are mandatory, no matter how tough the rehearsals get. Before they left, Scott read out one final listener message praising George’s confidence growth and kindness. Alexis looked like a proud sister, and George quietly absorbed the love, saying how strange — and lovely — it feels to be supported by people who didn’t know him a few months ago. Scott sent them off with genuine warmth, reminding listeners they could watch the final on Saturday night, and promising more Strictly finalists all week. Aled Jones and Carrie Hope Fletcher: Elf, Legends and Walking in the Air The festive atmosphere ramped up even further when Aled Jones and Carrie Hope Fletcher arrived to talk about Elf the Musical. Scott immediately addressed the elephant in the room — Walking in the Air — and Aled took it all in good humour, admitting he used to mind the constant references when he was younger but now just thinks about “the money”. Carrie laughed along, clearly loving the energy of the studio and the affection everyone still has for Aled’s iconic voice. Carrie spoke passionately about playing Jovie, describing her as jaded, anti-Christmas and very New York — until Buddy the Elf softens her. Scott was delighted to learn that Buddy is played by Carrie’s real-life husband, Joel Montague, and that he barely leaves the stage for the entire show. Carrie joked that she spends half the night drinking tea in her dressing room while Joel tap dances relentlessly, before helping him with his tap routine each evening. Aled shared stories from his childhood, including listening to Les Misérables on repeat during long train journeys to London to avoid people staring at “the kid from The Snowman”. Carrie, a huge Les Mis fan herself, was visibly impressed, and Scott immediately suggested a duet. This led — inevitably — to Scott producing his tin whistle and attempting Walking in the Air live on air. Carrie diplomatically praised the effort, while Aled kindly suggested “everyone has to start somewhere”. When Aled finally sang Walking in the Air properly, the studio fell into reverent silence, with Scott calling it “one of the all-time greats”. He reeled off Aled’s career highlights — singing for royalty, the Pope, selling millions of albums — before declaring that being a traffic cone on The Masked Singer might still be the pinnacle. Aled agreed, admitting it was also the hottest he’s ever been on television. Carrie reflected on how joyful it is to perform a Christmas show in December, especially when audiences are craving escapism. She teased the snowy finale that leaves some audience members soaked and laughing, while Ellie Brennan confirmed she’d experienced it firsthand. The pair spoke warmly about working together and their shared theatre history, with Scott finishing by urging listeners to catch Elf the Musical before it closes in early January. The Easiest Quiz: Redemption and the Feast of Stephen The Zero Percent Club redemption continued with Rachel from Cornwall returning to the Easiest Quiz after previously not knowing the colour of the TARDIS. This time, she stormed ahead with confidence, only to be momentarily derailed by a lyric-based curveball involving Good King Wenceslas. Scott gleefully explained “the Feast of Stephen”, while Rachel laughed it off and celebrated a very respectable 16 points. “The redemption tour,” she declared — a phrase Scott immediately adopted. Birthday Game The Birthday Game took Scott to the Tyne Valley to celebrate Rachel’s 50th, complete with romantic Lake District memories, future Amalfi Coast dreams and a teams call her boss didn’t know she was missing. When Green, Green Grass of Home by Tom Jones landed on the spinner, Scott celebrated a Welsh cultural moment with full sincerity — briefly interrupted by his own instinct to move things along, before apologising and letting the emotion land. The post 16 December 2025: Strictly Finalists, Elf Stars and Aled Jones Light Up Radio 2 first appeared on Unofficial Mills.View the full article
    • Ellie Brennan in for OJ Borg on overnights Christmas Eve into Christmas Day, Boxing Day, plus the 29th to 31st December.
    • Feels like it'll be the most consistency Going Home has had in a while.
    • Have Jamie Laing & Emil Franchi presented a show together this year?
    • Danni has spoken about her boyfriend on Instagram and tagged him in pictures. Jon Wilson, who is a camera operator at ITV News in Wales.
    • I remember when he did a whole thing on me never having seen James Bond, at least I've seen Love Actually 😂
×
×
  • Create New...
I’m raising funds to upgrade the Unofficial Mills servers, improve site speed, and safeguard the full Scott Mills archive. With Scott on breakfast, more people are visiting than ever, so every bit of support helps us grow and keep the archive alive.