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John McCririck

John Michael McCririck[1] (17 April 1940 – 5 July 2019) was an English horse racing pundit, television personality and journalist.

John McCririck
McCririck in 2006
Born
John Michael McCririck

(1940-04-17)17 April 1940
Died5 July 2019(2019-07-05) (aged 79)
Occupations
  • Horse racing pundit
  • journalist
  • television personality
Years active1978–2019
Spouse
Jenny McCririck
(m. 1971)

McCririck began his career at The Sporting Life, where he twice won at the British Press Awards for his campaigning journalism, but his role was terminated in 1984. In 1981, he joined ITV Sport's horse racing coverage which moved, during 1984 and 1985, to Channel 4 as Channel 4 Racing. In October 2012, the channel announced that he would be dropped from its team, which McCririck blamed on ageism; he took the matter to an employment tribunal, but lost the case.

From the 1980s, McCririck appeared as a contestant on numerous television shows, including Bullseye, You Bet!, Celebrity Big Brother, Weakest Link, Wife Swap and Celebrity Poker Club. He also appeared on the current affairs discussion programme After Dark.

Early life

Born in Surbiton, Surrey, McCririck was educated at Elizabeth College, Guernsey,[1][2] Victoria College, Jersey,[3] and Harrow School, where his fellow pupils included Julian Wilson, later a fellow racing journalist.[4] He left with three O-Levels, having also run the book on cross country races.[4]

Career

After failing to get into the diplomatic service, McCririck was briefly a waiter at The Dorchester hotel.[4] During the era when off-course betting was illegal in the UK, he worked for an illegal bookmaker, before becoming a bookmaker himself, at which he admitted to having failed. He then became a tic-tac man.[4]

He began his career in journalism at The Sporting Life, where he twice won at the British Press Awards for his campaigning journalism; he was sacked in 1984.[4] He joined the Daily Star, but was later sacked by the newspaper after allegations emerged that he was in debt to his bookmaker; he later successfully sued the paper at an employment tribunal.[4]

Having previously become a results sub-editor on the BBC's Grandstand, from 1981 he joined ITV Sport's horse racing coverage; he had previously appeared in a debate about fox hunting on the ITV children's programme Saturday Banana in 1978. During 1984 and 1985, horse racing moved from ITV to Channel 4 as Channel 4 Racing, where his role was expanded and he reported from the betting ring.[4] His signature flamboyant attire of a large deerstalker hat, sideburns, and brightly coloured matching suits and trousers, coupled with huge cigars, became a recognisable personal style.[5]

 
McCririck (far right), with trademark cigar, on Channel 4's After Dark on 9 April 1988

In 1988, on the evening after the Grand National, he made an extended appearance on the After Dark topical discussion programme on Channel 4, alongside Barney Curley and the Duchess of Argyll, in an episode entitled "Horse Racing, Sport Of Kings?"[6]

In October 2012 Channel 4 announced that McCririck would not be included in the team presenting racing from January 2013,[7] which McCririck blamed on ageism,[8] taking Channel 4 to an employment tribunal. On 13 November the tribunal ruled against McCririck[9][10] saying, "All the evidence is that Mr McCririck's pantomime persona, as demonstrated on the celebrity television appearances, and his persona when appearing on Channel 4 Racing, together with his self-described bigoted and male chauvinist views were clearly unpalatable to a wider audience."[11] The panel was told by witnesses from the television station and IMG (the production company) that he was dropped because he was "offensive" and "disgusting".[12]

In December 2018 McCririck joined the editorial team at The Racing Paper as a weekly columnist.[13][14]

Other media appearances

McCririck appeared on the 1991 Bullseye Christmas Special, winning the top prize for his chosen charity, the Sue Ryder Foundation.[15] He also appeared in the Celebrity Poker Club television series, reaching the Grand Finale of series one, won by Sir Clive Sinclair.[16] McCririck also appeared during ITV's snooker coverage in a betting capacity.[17]

In March 1994, he appeared on the BBC One TV show Noel's House Party, receiving a Gotcha trophy.[18][19]

In 1997, McCririck was tricked by two separate episodes of spoof TV show Brass Eye, once in an item about artificial insemination[20] and another in an item, appearing as himself, about Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe starring in a musical while on day-release from prison.[21]

In January 2005, he was a contestant in the third series of Celebrity Big Brother.[22] He competed on Weakest Link.[23] In April 2005, McCririck appeared on an episode of Hell's Kitchen (season 3, episode 8) in which Head Chef Marco Pierre White refused to serve him after McCririck told him that his consommé was 'greasy', in spite of being informed that it contained foie gras and truffle oil. White commented after the sequence, "I know John. He's awkward, he's got no taste. All you have to do is look at how he dresses."[24]

In 2006, he appeared in the episode Drama on the show Still Game, playing himself on Channel 4 Racing telling Winston Ingram which horse to back.[25] McCririck was a housemate in Ultimate Big Brother in August 2010.[26]

In 2011, he was featured in the fourth episode of the British version of Celebrity Ghost Stories recounting his experiences of a haunted passageway at Harrow School.[27]

On 26 June 2015, on the sixteenth series of Big Brother, it was announced that McCririck would be returning to Big Brother, taking part in Big Brother's Hotel from Hell the following week, where he would be staying in the house and other ex-housemates would join him on Monday 29 June.[28][29]

Personal life

McCririck married Jennifer Barnes in 1970 and referred to her as "The Booby". He was accused of frequent misogyny.[30] In 2006, the couple took part in Wife Swap alongside Edwina Currie and her husband.[31] McCririck was also a well-known supporter of Newcastle United F.C.[32]

In early 2018, McCririck contracted influenza which resulted in a chest infection. The illness caused him to suffer dramatic weight loss.[33]

McCririck died at The Princess Grace Hospital,[34] London, on 5 July 2019, after a short illness with lung cancer;[35] he was 79.[36][37]

Writing in The Guardian on the day McCririck died, racing correspondent Chris Cook said: "He was outrageous, in both speech and appearance, because what he wanted most of all was a reaction and so he enlivened many a broadcast or social occasion that might otherwise have fallen rather flat... While McCririck thrived on the attention his persona brought him, the buffoon act sold him short. He was a skilled journalist whose investigations uncovered a couple of betting-related scandals in the 70s. The producers of Channel 4 Racing almost invariably turned to McCririck when there was a serious interview to be done."[38] On 12 July 2019 McCririck was featured in the BBC Radio 4 obituary programme Last Word.[39]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Wilson, Julian (5 July 2019). "John McCririck obituary". The Guardian.
  2. ^ Elizabeth College Register, Volume IV (1940–1975), student number 4720, p. 182, compiled by Keith Bichard, published 2000 in Guernsey
  3. ^ "Headlines". www.take2theweb.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Stephen, Moss (4 July 2001). "Interview: John McCririck". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  5. ^ "Racing's 'Big Mac', broadcaster John McCririck dies, aged 79". Racing TV.
  6. ^ "After Dark: with the Duchess of Argyll, Christine Keeler, Harry Belafonte". www.openmedia.co.uk.
  7. ^ "John McCririck sacked from Channel 4 racing team". The Daily Telegraph. 25 October 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  8. ^ "John McCririck accuses Channel 4 of ageism after racing veterans axed". The Guardian. 25 October 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  9. ^ "No age discrimination by C4 in John McCririck claim". Shoosmiths.
  10. ^ Cook, Chris (13 November 2013). "John McCririck loses age discrimination case against Channel 4" – via www.theguardian.com.
  11. ^ "McCririck loses discrimination case". BBC News. 13 November 2013.
  12. ^ Claire Duffin "'Unpalatable' John McCririck loses his age discrimination case against Channel 4", The Daily Telegraph, 13 November 2013
  13. ^ Paper, The Racing (7 December 2018). "Big Mac is back in The Racing Paper – out Saturday!".
  14. ^ Binns, Katie. "John McCririck: Rein in my spending? I don't fancy those odds".
  15. ^ Perry, Chris (3 February 2016). The Kaleidoscope British Christmas Television Guide 1937–2013. Lulu.com. ISBN 9781900203609 – via Google Books.
  16. ^ Coren, Victoria (25 October 2003). "Victoria Coren on Celebrity Poker Club" – via www.theguardian.com.
  17. ^ Hendry, Stephen (6 September 2018). Me and the Table – My Autobiography. John Blake Publishing Ltd. ISBN 9781786069047 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "G&TV: Noel's House Party (12/03/94) – Ganymede & Titan".
  19. ^ "Noel's House Party - Episode Guide | TVmaze". www.tvmaze.com.
  20. ^ "Brass Eye[12/02/97] (1997)". BFI.
  21. ^ Randall, Lucian (13 May 2010). Disgusting Bliss: The Brass Eye of Chris Morris. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9780857200907 – via Google Books.
  22. ^ "Programmes – Most Popular – All 4".
  23. ^ Sport, Telegraph (5 July 2019). "Racing broadcaster John McCririck has died, aged 79". The Telegraph – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  24. ^ "McCririck cooks up a stir at 'Hell's Kitchen'". Digital Spy. 29 April 2005.
  25. ^ "Still Game, Series 5, Episode 1 – Drama". BBC. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 October 2013.
  27. ^ "Celebrity Ghost Stories UK – S1 – Episode 4". Radio Times.
  28. ^ "John McCririck's best bits on Celebrity Big Brother following death aged 79". 5 July 2019.
  29. ^ "Big Brother 2015: 5 strange requests from guest John McCririck in the 'hotel from hell' task". OK! Magazine. 30 June 2015.
  30. ^ "The Big Interview: John McCririck". The Times. London. 13 March 2005. Retrieved 29 January 2009.
  31. ^ "Celebrity Wife Swap – Episode Guide – All 4".
  32. ^ Hutchinson, Lisa (5 July 2019). "Horse racing pundit and Newcastle United fan John McCririck dies". nechronicle.
  33. ^ Mitchell, Bea (5 October 2018). "John McCririck shocks Big Brother's Bit on the Side viewers with huge weight loss". Digital Spy. (Hearst Magazines UK). Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  34. ^ "Former ITV and Channel 4 racing and betting guru John McCririck dies aged 79 | Horse Racing News | Racing Post". www.racingpost.com. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  35. ^ "John McCririck's wife reveals he died after battle with lung cancer". Evening Standard. 6 July 2019.
  36. ^ "John McCririck: Legendary racing pundit dies aged 79". BBC News. 5 July 2019. Archived from the original on 5 July 2019. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  37. ^ "Celebrity Big Brother and racing star John McCririck dies aged 79". Metro. 5 July 2019. Archived from the original on 5 July 2019. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  38. ^ Cook, Chris (5 July 2019). "John McCririck's buffoon act sold a seriously skilled journalist short". The Guardian.
  39. ^ "Last Word - Eva Kor, Christopher Booker, João Gilberto, John McCririck - BBC Sounds". www.bbc.co.uk.

External links

  • John McCririck at IMDb
  • Interview in The Guardian, 4 July 2001
  • John McCririck profile at Biogs.com
  • [1] Interview Star Sports

john, mccririck, john, michael, mccririck, april, 1940, july, 2019, english, horse, racing, pundit, television, personality, journalist, mccririck, 2006bornjohn, michael, mccririck, 1940, april, 1940surbiton, surrey, englanddied5, july, 2019, 2019, aged, maryl. John Michael McCririck 1 17 April 1940 5 July 2019 was an English horse racing pundit television personality and journalist John McCririckMcCririck in 2006BornJohn Michael McCririck 1940 04 17 17 April 1940Surbiton Surrey EnglandDied5 July 2019 2019 07 05 aged 79 Marylebone LondonOccupationsHorse racing punditjournalisttelevision personalityYears active1978 2019SpouseJenny McCririck m 1971 wbr McCririck began his career at The Sporting Life where he twice won at the British Press Awards for his campaigning journalism but his role was terminated in 1984 In 1981 he joined ITV Sport s horse racing coverage which moved during 1984 and 1985 to Channel 4 as Channel 4 Racing In October 2012 the channel announced that he would be dropped from its team which McCririck blamed on ageism he took the matter to an employment tribunal but lost the case From the 1980s McCririck appeared as a contestant on numerous television shows including Bullseye You Bet Celebrity Big Brother Weakest Link Wife Swap and Celebrity Poker Club He also appeared on the current affairs discussion programme After Dark Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Other media appearances 4 Personal life 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditBorn in Surbiton Surrey McCririck was educated at Elizabeth College Guernsey 1 2 Victoria College Jersey 3 and Harrow School where his fellow pupils included Julian Wilson later a fellow racing journalist 4 He left with three O Levels having also run the book on cross country races 4 Career EditAfter failing to get into the diplomatic service McCririck was briefly a waiter at The Dorchester hotel 4 During the era when off course betting was illegal in the UK he worked for an illegal bookmaker before becoming a bookmaker himself at which he admitted to having failed He then became a tic tac man 4 He began his career in journalism at The Sporting Life where he twice won at the British Press Awards for his campaigning journalism he was sacked in 1984 4 He joined the Daily Star but was later sacked by the newspaper after allegations emerged that he was in debt to his bookmaker he later successfully sued the paper at an employment tribunal 4 Having previously become a results sub editor on the BBC s Grandstand from 1981 he joined ITV Sport s horse racing coverage he had previously appeared in a debate about fox hunting on the ITV children s programme Saturday Banana in 1978 During 1984 and 1985 horse racing moved from ITV to Channel 4 as Channel 4 Racing where his role was expanded and he reported from the betting ring 4 His signature flamboyant attire of a large deerstalker hat sideburns and brightly coloured matching suits and trousers coupled with huge cigars became a recognisable personal style 5 McCririck far right with trademark cigar on Channel 4 s After Dark on 9 April 1988 In 1988 on the evening after the Grand National he made an extended appearance on the After Dark topical discussion programme on Channel 4 alongside Barney Curley and the Duchess of Argyll in an episode entitled Horse Racing Sport Of Kings 6 In October 2012 Channel 4 announced that McCririck would not be included in the team presenting racing from January 2013 7 which McCririck blamed on ageism 8 taking Channel 4 to an employment tribunal On 13 November the tribunal ruled against McCririck 9 10 saying All the evidence is that Mr McCririck s pantomime persona as demonstrated on the celebrity television appearances and his persona when appearing on Channel 4 Racing together with his self described bigoted and male chauvinist views were clearly unpalatable to a wider audience 11 The panel was told by witnesses from the television station and IMG the production company that he was dropped because he was offensive and disgusting 12 In December 2018 McCririck joined the editorial team at The Racing Paper as a weekly columnist 13 14 Other media appearances EditMcCririck appeared on the 1991 Bullseye Christmas Special winning the top prize for his chosen charity the Sue Ryder Foundation 15 He also appeared in the Celebrity Poker Club television series reaching the Grand Finale of series one won by Sir Clive Sinclair 16 McCririck also appeared during ITV s snooker coverage in a betting capacity 17 In March 1994 he appeared on the BBC One TV show Noel s House Party receiving a Gotcha trophy 18 19 In 1997 McCririck was tricked by two separate episodes of spoof TV show Brass Eye once in an item about artificial insemination 20 and another in an item appearing as himself about Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe starring in a musical while on day release from prison 21 In January 2005 he was a contestant in the third series of Celebrity Big Brother 22 He competed on Weakest Link 23 In April 2005 McCririck appeared on an episode of Hell s Kitchen season 3 episode 8 in which Head Chef Marco Pierre White refused to serve him after McCririck told him that his consomme was greasy in spite of being informed that it contained foie gras and truffle oil White commented after the sequence I know John He s awkward he s got no taste All you have to do is look at how he dresses 24 In 2006 he appeared in the episode Drama on the show Still Game playing himself on Channel 4 Racing telling Winston Ingram which horse to back 25 McCririck was a housemate in Ultimate Big Brother in August 2010 26 In 2011 he was featured in the fourth episode of the British version of Celebrity Ghost Stories recounting his experiences of a haunted passageway at Harrow School 27 On 26 June 2015 on the sixteenth series of Big Brother it was announced that McCririck would be returning to Big Brother taking part in Big Brother s Hotel from Hell the following week where he would be staying in the house and other ex housemates would join him on Monday 29 June 28 29 Personal life EditMcCririck married Jennifer Barnes in 1970 and referred to her as The Booby He was accused of frequent misogyny 30 In 2006 the couple took part in Wife Swap alongside Edwina Currie and her husband 31 McCririck was also a well known supporter of Newcastle United F C 32 In early 2018 McCririck contracted influenza which resulted in a chest infection The illness caused him to suffer dramatic weight loss 33 McCririck died at The Princess Grace Hospital 34 London on 5 July 2019 after a short illness with lung cancer 35 he was 79 36 37 Writing in The Guardian on the day McCririck died racing correspondent Chris Cook said He was outrageous in both speech and appearance because what he wanted most of all was a reaction and so he enlivened many a broadcast or social occasion that might otherwise have fallen rather flat While McCririck thrived on the attention his persona brought him the buffoon act sold him short He was a skilled journalist whose investigations uncovered a couple of betting related scandals in the 70s The producers of Channel 4 Racing almost invariably turned to McCririck when there was a serious interview to be done 38 On 12 July 2019 McCririck was featured in the BBC Radio 4 obituary programme Last Word 39 See also EditHorse racing in Great BritainReferences Edit a b Wilson Julian 5 July 2019 John McCririck obituary The Guardian Elizabeth College Register Volume IV 1940 1975 student number 4720 p 182 compiled by Keith Bichard published 2000 in Guernsey Headlines www take2theweb com a b c d e f g Stephen Moss 4 July 2001 Interview John McCririck The Guardian Retrieved 5 July 2019 Racing s Big Mac broadcaster John McCririck dies aged 79 Racing TV After Dark with the Duchess of Argyll Christine Keeler Harry Belafonte www openmedia co uk John McCririck sacked from Channel 4 racing team The Daily Telegraph 25 October 2012 Retrieved 26 October 2012 John McCririck accuses Channel 4 of ageism after racing veterans axed The Guardian 25 October 2012 Retrieved 26 October 2012 No age discrimination by C4 in John McCririck claim Shoosmiths Cook Chris 13 November 2013 John McCririck loses age discrimination case against Channel 4 via www theguardian com McCririck loses discrimination case BBC News 13 November 2013 Claire Duffin Unpalatable John McCririck loses his age discrimination case against Channel 4 The Daily Telegraph 13 November 2013 Paper The Racing 7 December 2018 Big Mac is back in The Racing Paper out Saturday Binns Katie John McCririck Rein in my spending I don t fancy those odds Perry Chris 3 February 2016 The Kaleidoscope British Christmas Television Guide 1937 2013 Lulu com ISBN 9781900203609 via Google Books Coren Victoria 25 October 2003 Victoria Coren on Celebrity Poker Club via www theguardian com Hendry Stephen 6 September 2018 Me and the Table My Autobiography John Blake Publishing Ltd ISBN 9781786069047 via Google Books G amp TV Noel s House Party 12 03 94 Ganymede amp Titan Noel s House Party Episode Guide TVmaze www tvmaze com Brass Eye 12 02 97 1997 BFI Randall Lucian 13 May 2010 Disgusting Bliss The Brass Eye of Chris Morris Simon and Schuster ISBN 9780857200907 via Google Books Programmes Most Popular All 4 Sport Telegraph 5 July 2019 Racing broadcaster John McCririck has died aged 79 The Telegraph via www telegraph co uk McCririck cooks up a stir at Hell s Kitchen Digital Spy 29 April 2005 Still Game Series 5 Episode 1 Drama BBC Retrieved 6 July 2019 Big Brother news and gossip Unreality TV Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Celebrity Ghost Stories UK S1 Episode 4 Radio Times John McCririck s best bits on Celebrity Big Brother following death aged 79 5 July 2019 Big Brother 2015 5 strange requests from guest John McCririck in the hotel from hell task OK Magazine 30 June 2015 The Big Interview John McCririck The Times London 13 March 2005 Retrieved 29 January 2009 Celebrity Wife Swap Episode Guide All 4 Hutchinson Lisa 5 July 2019 Horse racing pundit and Newcastle United fan John McCririck dies nechronicle Mitchell Bea 5 October 2018 John McCririck shocks Big Brother s Bit on the Side viewers with huge weight loss Digital Spy Hearst Magazines UK Retrieved 5 October 2018 Former ITV and Channel 4 racing and betting guru John McCririck dies aged 79 Horse Racing News Racing Post www racingpost com Retrieved 5 July 2021 John McCririck s wife reveals he died after battle with lung cancer Evening Standard 6 July 2019 John McCririck Legendary racing pundit dies aged 79 BBC News 5 July 2019 Archived from the original on 5 July 2019 Retrieved 5 July 2019 Celebrity Big Brother and racing star John McCririck dies aged 79 Metro 5 July 2019 Archived from the original on 5 July 2019 Retrieved 5 July 2019 Cook Chris 5 July 2019 John McCririck s buffoon act sold a seriously skilled journalist short The Guardian Last Word Eva Kor Christopher Booker Joao Gilberto John McCririck BBC Sounds www bbc co uk External links EditJohn McCririck at IMDb Interview in The Guardian 4 July 2001 John McCririck profile at Biogs com 1 Interview Star Sports Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John McCririck amp oldid 1118972629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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