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Today (BBC Radio 4)

Today, colloquially known as the Today programme, is a long-running British morning news and current-affairs radio programme on BBC Radio 4. Broadcast on Monday to Saturday from 6:00 am to 9:00 am, it is produced by BBC News and is the highest-rated programme on Radio 4 and one of the BBC's most popular programmes across its radio networks.[1] In-depth political interviews and reports are interspersed with regular news bulletins, as well as Thought for the Day. It has been voted the most influential news programme in Britain in setting the political agenda,[2] with an average weekly listening audience around 7 million.[3][4]

Today
GenreNews, current events, and factual
Running time
  • 180 minutes (Monday–Saturday)
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Language(s)English
Home stationBBC Home Service (1957–1967)
BBC Radio 4 (1967–present)
Hosted by
Edited byOwenna Griffiths
Recording studio
Original release28 October 1957 (1957-10-28) – present
WebsiteProgramme website
Twitter

History

Today was launched on the BBC's Home Service on 28 October 1957 as a programme of "topical talks" to give listeners an alternative to listening to light music. The programme's founders were Isa Benzie and Janet Quigley. Benzie gave the programme its name, and served as its first de facto editor.[5] It was initially broadcast as two 20-minute editions slotted in around the existing news bulletins and religious and musical items. It became part of the BBC's Current Affairs department in 1963, and started to become more news-orientated. The two editions also became longer, and by the end of the 1960s it had become a single programme two hours in length that enveloped the news bulletins and the religious talk that had become Thought for the Day in 1970.[6] In May 1977, Radio 4 controller Ian McIntyre cut it to two 25-minute parts, filling the gap with Up to the Hour. The new format was unpopular with BBC staff, including Peter Donaldson who on at least one occasion openly ridiculed the programme on air.[7] It also provoked comments in the diary columns of the daily newspapers. From July 1978, Today returned to its previous length and Up to the Hour was dropped.[8]

Jack de Manio[9] became its principal presenter in 1958. He was held in affection by listeners, but became notorious for on-air gaffes (announcing a documentary on Nigeria titled 'The Land of Niger' as 'The Land of Nigger', and referring to Yoko Ono as "Yoko Hama, or whatever her name is", for instance).[10] In 1970 the programme format was changed so that there were two presenters each day. De Manio left in 1971, and in the late 1970s the team of John Timpson and Brian Redhead became established. Timpson had been critical of the content, style and professionalism of Today—describing it once as "not so much a programme, more a way of telling the time" and being filled with "eccentric octogenarians, prize pumpkins, and folk who ate lightbulbs and spiders".[11]

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, under editors Ken Goudie and Julian Holland, Today made moves to broaden its appeal away from broadcasting a lot of national politics with London-centric bias. Presentation was split for a time between London, usually by John Timpson, and from Manchester, usually by Brian Redhead. The objective was to make it more of a balanced, national programme. The on-air humour of the two presenters and the split of locations made the programme very popular and influential. Brian Redhead was quoted, "If you want to drop a word in the ear of the nation, then this is the programme in which to do it."[12] This pairing lasted until Timpson's retirement in 1986. Other presenters during this period included Libby Purves in the late 1970s. John Humphrys and Sue MacGregor joined the rotating list of presenters in 1986. Peter Hobday, who had first broadcast on the programme in the 1950s, was a regular presenter from the early 1980s and a favourite with listeners because of his relaxed, urbane style.

By this time the programme was benefiting from publicity gained after it became known that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a regular listener. Ministers thus became keen to go on the programme, but the tough, confrontational interviewing they encountered led to accusations that the BBC was biased. Criticism was particularly directed against Redhead, who was often seen as being on the left. Chancellor Nigel Lawson accused him, during a live interview in 1988, of having been a Labour voter all his life.[13] The style of the male interviewers was analysed and contrasted with the approach of MacGregor, who was alleged to be giving subjects an easier time. The 'Big 8.10' interview that follows the 8 o'clock news had become an important institution of British politics, a position it retains.[14][15]

After Brian Redhead died in January 1994, James Naughtie became a member of the team. Peter Hobday presented the programme regularly until 1996; Sarah Montague replaced MacGregor in 2002. Carolyn Quinn was a regular presenter until 2008 as was Edward Stourton until 2009. Other more occasional presenters include the BBC's Stephen Sackur and Tim Franks.[16] Evan Davis and Justin Webb[17] were the newest regular presenters to join the roster until Mishal Husain in 2013. Husain became the second regular female presenter when James Naughtie began to cover the Scottish Independence referendum as a Good Morning Scotland presenter for two days a week, and across the BBC's output. Naughtie returned to Today before the 2015 general election.[18]

On 7 July 2015, the BBC announced that James Naughtie was to leave the programme, to become a Special Correspondent for BBC Radio 4.[19] Two days later, Nick Robinson was announced as Naughtie's replacement.[20] In April 2018, Martha Kearney joined the team in a straight swap with Sarah Montague, who left to take over Kearney's old role as lead presenter of The World at One.[21]

On 19 September 2019, John Humphrys hosted his last edition of Today, after 32 years on the show. His last major guests were former Prime Ministers David Cameron and Tony Blair, as well as drag personality Dame Edna Everage.[22]

Current presenters

Year began Presenter
2009 Justin Webb
2013 Mishal Husain
2015 Nick Robinson
2018 Martha Kearney
2021 Amol Rajan

Former presenters

The longest serving presenter on Today was John Humphrys, who presented the programme for 32 years and 260 days between 1987 and 2019.[22][23]

Newsreaders

Among the newsreaders are Chris Aldridge, Viji Alles, Charles Carroll, Mark Forrest, Caroline Nicholls, Alan Smith, Tom Sandars, and Jane Steel.

Editors

Guest editors

Beginning in 2003, for over one week at the end of December, guest editors have been invited to commission items for one edition of the programme. These usually reflect their social or cultural interests and at the end of each edition the guest editor is interviewed by a member of the regular presenting team about the experience. Guest editors participating in the inaugural year of this feature were Monica Ali, Thom Yorke, Stephen Hawking, and Norman Tebbit, who is a frequent critic of the programme. Since its inception, notable guest editors have included: David Blunkett, who used the programme as an opportunity to 'turn the tables' on John Humphrys in 2005; Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, whose appearance on 29 December 2006 encompassed discussions of his growing concerns about the 'justification' for the invasion of Iraq, Britain's role in the affair, and the consequences for British armed forces; and Peter Hennessy, who, on 28 December 2007, led a visit to HMS Vigilant (a British Trident submarine) alongside its base at Faslane. Others including Queen Noor of Jordan (2005), Bono (2004) and Sarah, Duchess of York (2004) have also pitched in for this one-day editorial stint to promote their causes and interests.

Notable features

Today regularly holds an end-of-year poll. For many years this took the form of write-in votes for the Man and Woman of the Year. This was stopped after an episode of organised vote-rigging in 1990, but was soon revived as a telephone vote for a single Personality of the Year. A further episode of vote-rigging, in favour of Tony Blair in 1996, forced the programme-makers to consider more innovative polling questions. In 2004 listeners nominated candidates for a peerage, in 2005 the question was set of "Who Runs Britain?" (though this, too, turned out to be rigged). Recent years have also included nominations for a "Listener's Law" (which an MP agreed to sponsor as a parliamentary bill, although he did not support the winning nomination, which he thought was not appropriate), and, in 2006, nominations were sought for the law that listeners would most like to see repealed.[citation needed]

In Thought for the Day, featured since 1970, a speaker reflects on topical issues from a theological viewpoint, the editorial responsibility lying with BBC's Religion and Ethics Department (a point often made on the Today programme).[26] Notable contributors to the slot have included Rabbi Lionel Blue, the academic Elaine Storkey, the Sikh Indarjit Singh and Richard Harries, the former Bishop of Oxford. Over the years the slot has featured an increasing number of speakers from religions other than Christianity, though Christian speakers remain in a substantial majority. In August 2002, University of Oxford professor Richard Dawkins gave a non-religious humanist thought for the day; however, this did not replace the regular thought and was broadcast an hour later as an alternative thought.[citation needed]

In 1983 the long-running "Prayer for the Day", which had always gone on air at 6.50am, was moved to 6.25am and replaced by a "Business News" slot. It was later moved out of Today, in the face of protest from listeners, to 5.43am where it is still received by an appreciative audience.[citation needed]

The programme has a regular slot for sports news and items, 'Sports Desk', between 26 and 30 minutes past each hour, regularly presented by Garry Richardson, Jonathan Legard or Rob Bonnet and occasionally by Alison Mitchell, Karthi Gnanasegaram or Chris Dennis.[27] If Parliament is in session the previous day there will be a summary at about 06:50 (Yesterday in Parliament[28]) presented by two from Robert Orchard, David Wilby,[29] Rachel Hooper and Susan Hulme.[30]

Journalist and historian Peter Hennessy has made an assertion in one of his books[31] that a test that the commander of a British nuclear-missile submarine must use to determine whether the UK has been the target of a nuclear attack (in which case he has sealed orders which may authorise him to fire his nuclear missiles in retaliation), is to listen for the presence of Today on Radio 4's frequencies. If a certain number of days (said to be three) pass without the programme being broadcast, that is to be taken as evidence that the orders must be executed. The true conditions are of course secret, and Hennessy has never revealed his sources for this story, leading Paul Donovan, author of a book about Today, to express some scepticism about it.[32] However, the longwave signal of Radio 4 is capable of penetrating to surface depths where submarines can rise, although it does not have the range required to be heard at this depth far from the UK's coastal waters.

Message boards

In 2001, the Today programme created a system of message boards[33] allowing the users of its web site to challenge thinking on current affairs with all those contributing. Available statistics indicate the amassing, over five years, of up to 18,000 separate discussions – topic threads – sometimes with as many as 3,000 contributions per thread. However, on 16 November 2006 the programme changed its board policy so that only the producers of Today could start a thread, but all contributors could still join in with them. This action appeared to have been unattractive[34] to past contributors and, it seems, many stopped dealing with Today in favour of other outlets.[35] After the changes there were fewer contributions, but, on occasion, contributions made by the public were featured on-air in the Today programme. Message boards dedicated to the Today programme were discontinued around mid-2008 and listeners were invited to use the general BBC 'Have Your Say' board.[36]

Podcast

A podcast, Beyond Today, was launched on 29 October 2018. Presented alternately by Tina Daheley and Matthew Price and aimed at a younger audience, the production team contains the same number of women from black and ethnic minority backgrounds as it does men.[37]

Controversy

Today found itself in the midst of controversy again in 2002, when its editor Rod Liddle wrote a column in The Guardian that was extremely critical of the Countryside Alliance and which raised questions about his own impartiality. In the article, he wrote that catching "a glimpse of the forces supporting the Countryside Alliance: the public schools that laid on coaches; the fusty, belch-filled dining rooms of the London clubs that opened their doors, for the first time, to the protesters; the Prince of Wales and, of course, Camilla ... and suddenly, rather gloriously, it might be that you remember [why you voted Labour] once again." He resigned from his post on Today.

In the summer of 2003, Today once again found itself at the centre of allegations of political bias, this time against a Labour government. The controversy arose after Today broadcast a report by its correspondent Andrew Gilligan. The report alleged that a dossier the British Government had produced to convince the British public of the need to invade Iraq had been "sexed up" (deliberately exaggerated), and that the government had known this prior to publishing it. In his live 2-way (interview with presenter John Humphrys), just after 6.07 a.m., Gilligan asserted that the dossier and the Government "probably knew" that one of the main claims in the dossier "was wrong". Gilligan's anonymous source for the claim was Dr David Kelly, a key adviser on biological weapons who had worked in Iraq – though it was never established whether Dr Kelly had actually used the words Gilligan attributed to him. In the furore that followed Gilligan's report, David Kelly's name became public and he was forced to appear before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee. Shortly afterward he was found dead having presumably committed suicide. In the ensuing public inquiry (the Hutton Inquiry), which reported in January 2004, the BBC was heavily criticised. This led to the resignation of the BBC's chairman, Gavyn Davies, the Director-General, Greg Dyke, and Andrew Gilligan.

On Friday 5 November 2010, the programme failed to be transmitted due to 48-hour strike action at the BBC. Transmission continued the next day, in spite of ongoing industrial action, as Evan Davis and Sarah Montague decided to break the strike.[citation needed]

Criticism

"Radio 4 on the whole is good for using serious female presenters, but the Today programme lets it down badly", commented former Today newsreader Alice Arnold early in 2013, pointing out that Sarah Montague was (then) the only female presenter among the regular presenters.[38] During 2010, editor Ceri Thomas acknowledged that the gender balance was not ideal, but faced criticism for saying in an interview that the programme was not going to be the "first place you'll see those changes because it's just too tough an environment for novices, frankly".[39] Radio 4 presenter Mariella Frostrup described the men involved in running the programme in an interview as "a bunch of misogynists",[40] but later retracted this statement by saying she had been "careless" in her vocabulary.[41]

In 2011, Guardian journalist Kira Cochrane and colleagues researched the female–male ratio in the British media for a month. Concerning Today they found 83.5% of the contributors were male and the remaining 16.5% female.[42] The issue was thought important enough for culture minister Ed Vaizey to request a meeting with the BBC in January 2012,[43] and for Director-General George Entwistle, at the start of his brief period in charge of the BBC, to advocate that the next new Today presenter should be female.[44]

An interview with David Cameron conducted by John Humphrys in 2006 received 200 complaints concerning Humphrys' aggressive approach and "excessive" interruptions.[45] Ceri Thomas became the programme's editor shortly afterwards, and was asked about this issue. "I'm not going to rule out the confrontational interview as it is on occasion necessary... [A]ll the evidence we've got shows that the audience is overwhelmingly behind John Humphrys in general and support our right to do [this] kind of interviews."[45]

In a 2012 article decrying the BBC's attitude to science reporting, Guardian science columnist Martin Robbins wrote: "The Today programme claims to be serious, but seems to work on the basis that the best way to enlighten viewers is to take two people and force them into a sort of intellectual-masturbation death match. Graham Linehan appeared on the show last year to discuss his adaptation of The Ladykillers and found himself ambushed by questions that weren't just hostile, but sometimes completely bizarre."[46] Expert Women's Days, intended by the BBC as a training exercise intended in part to increase the number of female interviewees on Today, took place in several locations in 2013.[47]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Wogan's listenership close to 8m". BBC News. 2 February 2006.
  2. ^ "BBC News tops MPs' survey". BBC Newswatch. 14 April 2005.
  3. ^ "Rajar radio figures round-up: Radio 4's Today loses 300,000 listeners following departure of Jim Naughtie". Press Gazette (Press release). Progressive Media International. 19 May 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016. According to figures released by Rajar, it had an average reach of 6.8m listeners per week in the first three months of 2018, compared with 7.1m in the first quarter of 2015.
  4. ^ Sherwin, Adam (4 August 2016). "Brexit effect helps BBC Radio 4 Today programme win record audience". Today’s weekly audience soared to 7.35m listeners [...] The figure exceeded the programme’s previous record high of 7.18m in 2011, according to figures from listening bureau Rajar.
  5. ^ Paul Donovan, 'Benzie, Isa Donald (1902–1988)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 4 March 2017
  6. ^ Lizzie Clifford "Thought for the Day’: Beyond the god-of-the-slots", Ekklesia [c.2009]
  7. ^ "'Voice of Radio 4' Peter Donaldson dies at 70". BBC News. 3 November 2015.
  8. ^ Purves, Libby (23 October 2007). "Today turns 50". The Times. London. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  9. ^ Jack de Manio. Radio Academy.
  10. ^ Hugh Chignell (2 September 2011). Public Issue Radio: Talks, News and Current Affairs in the Twentieth Century. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-230-34645-1.
  11. ^ Hendy, David (2007). Life on Air: A History of Radio Four. Oxford University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780199248810.
  12. ^ Today Programme 1 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine. BBC Press Office. October 2007.
  13. ^ Michael Leapman Obituary: Brian Redhead, The Independent, 24 January 1994
  14. ^ Williams, Zoe (3 April 2010). "When Newsnight got a wife". The Guardian.
  15. ^ Mahoney, Elisabeth (10 January 2012). "Radio review: Today interview". The Guardian.
  16. ^ Tim Frank's Blog. BBC blogs archive
  17. ^ "Justin Webb joins Radio 4's Today programme presenting team" (Press release). BBC. 26 August 2009.
  18. ^ Jason Deans and Josh Halliday "BBC's Mishal Husain to join Today", The Guardian, 16 July 2013
  19. ^ "James Naughtie appointed Special Correspondent for Radio 4". Media Centre.
  20. ^ "Nick Robinson to become a presenter on BBC Radio 4's Today programme". Media Centre.
  21. ^ "Sarah Montague leaves BBC Radio 4's Today programme after 18 years". Radio Times.
  22. ^ a b "John Humphrys hosts his final edition of Radio 4 Today programme". BBC News. 19 September 2019.
  23. ^ Jones, Ian (18 September 2019). "Humphrys bows out as longest serving presenter in Today's history". Belfast Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  24. ^ Grierson, Jamie (30 January 2017). "Sarah Sands named editor of BBC Radio 4's Today programme". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  25. ^ "Owenna Griffiths appointed editor of Today programme". BBC. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  26. ^ BBC Religion and Ethics. BBC.
  27. ^ BBC Radio 4 – Today. BBC (1 January 1970).
  28. ^ "Westminster to your ears". BBC News (13 May 2004).
  29. ^ David Wilby 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Susan Hulme 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Hennessy, Peter, The Secret State: Whitehall and the Cold War, 1945–1970. Allen Lane, The Penguin Press. 256 pages. ISBN 0-7139-9626-9
  32. ^ Paul Donovan: All Our Todays: Forty Years of Radio 4's "Today" Programme.London, Jonathan Cape, 1997. ISBN 0-224-04358-7 (revised paperback edition is ISBN 0-09-928037-X)
  33. ^ Today Programme Message Board 5 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. BBC.
  34. ^ Haines, Lester. (10 November 2006) BBC in Radio 4 messageboard punch-up. The Register.
  35. ^ James St George 15 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Jamesstgeorge.proboards32.com.
  36. ^ Have Your Say. BBC News (1 January 1970).
  37. ^ Tobitt, Charlotte (29 October 2018). "BBC launches Today spin-off podcast with 'conversational and punchy' tone to reach younger on-demand audience". Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  38. ^ Alison Roberts "Alice Arnold: You look at men of a certain age on TV and think: 'If you were a woman, you wouldn't be there'", London Evening Standard, 8 January 2013
  39. ^ John Plunkett "Radio 4's Today editor under fire over comments on female presenters", The Guardian, 31 March 2010. See also Ceri Thomas "BBC Radio 4: the fog of gender war", The Guardian, 5 April 2010, where he responded to the criticism.
  40. ^ Alastair Jamieson "Radio 4 Today programme 'run by misogynists' says Mariella Frostrup", The Daily Telegraph, 26 May 2010
  41. ^ Andrew Hough "Mariella Frostrup: BBC Radio 4 presenter 'regrets misogynists jibe'", The Daily Telegraph, 2 June 2010
  42. ^ Kira Cochrane "Why is British public life dominated by men?" The Guardian, 4 December 2011
  43. ^ Christopher Hope "Eight out of 10 guests and presenters on 'Today' programme are men, complains minister", The Daily Telegraph, 24 January 2012
  44. ^ "BBC boss: next Today programme presenter should be a woman", The Daily Telegraph, 19 September 2012
  45. ^ a b James Silver "'Humphrys could see me off too'", The Guardian, 10 April 2006
  46. ^ Robbins, Martin (26 January 2012). "The BBC's problem with science". The Guardian.
  47. ^ Maggie Brown "BBC to hold Expert Women's Days in Salford, Glasgow and Cardiff", The Guardian, 18 March 2013

External links

  • Official website
  • Today at BBC Online  
  • Thought for the Day official site 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • Luckhurst, Tim (27 October 2007). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 27 October 2007.
  • The Today Programme – Review and analysis at the Journalism Now! project

today, radio, today, programme, radio, today, redirect, here, this, article, about, radio, show, other, programmes, this, name, today, television, today, colloquially, known, today, programme, long, running, british, morning, news, current, affairs, radio, pro. Today programme and Radio 4 Today redirect here This article is about the radio show For other programmes of this name see Today Television Today colloquially known as the Today programme is a long running British morning news and current affairs radio programme on BBC Radio 4 Broadcast on Monday to Saturday from 6 00 am to 9 00 am it is produced by BBC News and is the highest rated programme on Radio 4 and one of the BBC s most popular programmes across its radio networks 1 In depth political interviews and reports are interspersed with regular news bulletins as well as Thought for the Day It has been voted the most influential news programme in Britain in setting the political agenda 2 with an average weekly listening audience around 7 million 3 4 TodayGenreNews current events and factualRunning time180 minutes Monday Saturday Country of originUnited KingdomLanguage s EnglishHome stationBBC Home Service 1957 1967 BBC Radio 4 1967 present Hosted byJustin WebbMishal HusainNick RobinsonMartha KearneyAmol RajanEdited byOwenna GriffithsRecording studioBroadcasting House 1957 1997 Dec 2012 present BBC Television Centre 1997 Dec 2012 Original release28 October 1957 1957 10 28 presentWebsiteProgramme website Twitter Contents 1 History 2 Current presenters 3 Former presenters 4 Newsreaders 5 Editors 6 Guest editors 7 Notable features 8 Message boards 9 Podcast 10 Controversy 11 Criticism 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory EditToday was launched on the BBC s Home Service on 28 October 1957 as a programme of topical talks to give listeners an alternative to listening to light music The programme s founders were Isa Benzie and Janet Quigley Benzie gave the programme its name and served as its first de facto editor 5 It was initially broadcast as two 20 minute editions slotted in around the existing news bulletins and religious and musical items It became part of the BBC s Current Affairs department in 1963 and started to become more news orientated The two editions also became longer and by the end of the 1960s it had become a single programme two hours in length that enveloped the news bulletins and the religious talk that had become Thought for the Day in 1970 6 In May 1977 Radio 4 controller Ian McIntyre cut it to two 25 minute parts filling the gap with Up to the Hour The new format was unpopular with BBC staff including Peter Donaldson who on at least one occasion openly ridiculed the programme on air 7 It also provoked comments in the diary columns of the daily newspapers From July 1978 Today returned to its previous length and Up to the Hour was dropped 8 Jack de Manio 9 became its principal presenter in 1958 He was held in affection by listeners but became notorious for on air gaffes announcing a documentary on Nigeria titled The Land of Niger as The Land of Nigger and referring to Yoko Ono as Yoko Hama or whatever her name is for instance 10 In 1970 the programme format was changed so that there were two presenters each day De Manio left in 1971 and in the late 1970s the team of John Timpson and Brian Redhead became established Timpson had been critical of the content style and professionalism of Today describing it once as not so much a programme more a way of telling the time and being filled with eccentric octogenarians prize pumpkins and folk who ate lightbulbs and spiders 11 In the late 1970s and early 1980s under editors Ken Goudie and Julian Holland Today made moves to broaden its appeal away from broadcasting a lot of national politics with London centric bias Presentation was split for a time between London usually by John Timpson and from Manchester usually by Brian Redhead The objective was to make it more of a balanced national programme The on air humour of the two presenters and the split of locations made the programme very popular and influential Brian Redhead was quoted If you want to drop a word in the ear of the nation then this is the programme in which to do it 12 This pairing lasted until Timpson s retirement in 1986 Other presenters during this period included Libby Purves in the late 1970s John Humphrys and Sue MacGregor joined the rotating list of presenters in 1986 Peter Hobday who had first broadcast on the programme in the 1950s was a regular presenter from the early 1980s and a favourite with listeners because of his relaxed urbane style By this time the programme was benefiting from publicity gained after it became known that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a regular listener Ministers thus became keen to go on the programme but the tough confrontational interviewing they encountered led to accusations that the BBC was biased Criticism was particularly directed against Redhead who was often seen as being on the left Chancellor Nigel Lawson accused him during a live interview in 1988 of having been a Labour voter all his life 13 The style of the male interviewers was analysed and contrasted with the approach of MacGregor who was alleged to be giving subjects an easier time The Big 8 10 interview that follows the 8 o clock news had become an important institution of British politics a position it retains 14 15 After Brian Redhead died in January 1994 James Naughtie became a member of the team Peter Hobday presented the programme regularly until 1996 Sarah Montague replaced MacGregor in 2002 Carolyn Quinn was a regular presenter until 2008 as was Edward Stourton until 2009 Other more occasional presenters include the BBC s Stephen Sackur and Tim Franks 16 Evan Davis and Justin Webb 17 were the newest regular presenters to join the roster until Mishal Husain in 2013 Husain became the second regular female presenter when James Naughtie began to cover the Scottish Independence referendum as a Good Morning Scotland presenter for two days a week and across the BBC s output Naughtie returned to Today before the 2015 general election 18 On 7 July 2015 the BBC announced that James Naughtie was to leave the programme to become a Special Correspondent for BBC Radio 4 19 Two days later Nick Robinson was announced as Naughtie s replacement 20 In April 2018 Martha Kearney joined the team in a straight swap with Sarah Montague who left to take over Kearney s old role as lead presenter of The World at One 21 On 19 September 2019 John Humphrys hosted his last edition of Today after 32 years on the show His last major guests were former Prime Ministers David Cameron and Tony Blair as well as drag personality Dame Edna Everage 22 Current presenters EditYear began Presenter2009 Justin Webb2013 Mishal Husain2015 Nick Robinson2018 Martha Kearney2021 Amol RajanFormer presenters EditThe longest serving presenter on Today was John Humphrys who presented the programme for 32 years and 260 days between 1987 and 2019 22 23 Jack de Manio 1958 1971 Robert Hudson 1964 1968 John Timpson 1964 1970 1976 1978 1986 John Tidmarsh 1968 1969 Douglas Cameron 1970 1974 Robert Robinson 1971 1974 Barry Norman 1974 1976 Desmond Lynam 1974 1975 Paul Barnes 1975 1977 Brian Redhead 1975 1993 Gillian Reynolds 1975 1976 Nigel Rees 1976 1978 Libby Purves 1978 1981 Hugh Sykes 1978 1982 Peter Hobday 1983 1996 Jenni Murray 1985 1987 Sue MacGregor 1984 2002 Anna Ford 1993 1999 Edward Stourton 1999 2009 Carolyn Quinn 2004 2008 Evan Davis 2007 2014 James Naughtie 1994 2015 Winifred Robinson 1996 2000 Sarah Montague 2001 2018 John Humphrys 1987 2019 Newsreaders EditAmong the newsreaders are Chris Aldridge Viji Alles Charles Carroll Mark Forrest Caroline Nicholls Alan Smith Tom Sandars and Jane Steel Editors EditJenny Abramsky 1986 1987 Phil Harding 1987 1993 Roger Mosey 1993 1997 Rod Liddle 1998 2002 Kevin Marsh 2002 2006 Ceri Thomas 2006 2012 Jamie Angus 2013 2017 Sarah Sands 2017 2020 24 Owenna Griffiths 2020 present 25 Guest editors EditFurther information List of Today programme guest editors Beginning in 2003 for over one week at the end of December guest editors have been invited to commission items for one edition of the programme These usually reflect their social or cultural interests and at the end of each edition the guest editor is interviewed by a member of the regular presenting team about the experience Guest editors participating in the inaugural year of this feature were Monica Ali Thom Yorke Stephen Hawking and Norman Tebbit who is a frequent critic of the programme Since its inception notable guest editors have included David Blunkett who used the programme as an opportunity to turn the tables on John Humphrys in 2005 Rowan Williams the Archbishop of Canterbury whose appearance on 29 December 2006 encompassed discussions of his growing concerns about the justification for the invasion of Iraq Britain s role in the affair and the consequences for British armed forces and Peter Hennessy who on 28 December 2007 led a visit to HMS Vigilant a British Trident submarine alongside its base at Faslane Others including Queen Noor of Jordan 2005 Bono 2004 and Sarah Duchess of York 2004 have also pitched in for this one day editorial stint to promote their causes and interests Notable features EditToday regularly holds an end of year poll For many years this took the form of write in votes for the Man and Woman of the Year This was stopped after an episode of organised vote rigging in 1990 but was soon revived as a telephone vote for a single Personality of the Year A further episode of vote rigging in favour of Tony Blair in 1996 forced the programme makers to consider more innovative polling questions In 2004 listeners nominated candidates for a peerage in 2005 the question was set of Who Runs Britain though this too turned out to be rigged Recent years have also included nominations for a Listener s Law which an MP agreed to sponsor as a parliamentary bill although he did not support the winning nomination which he thought was not appropriate and in 2006 nominations were sought for the law that listeners would most like to see repealed citation needed In Thought for the Day featured since 1970 a speaker reflects on topical issues from a theological viewpoint the editorial responsibility lying with BBC s Religion and Ethics Department a point often made on the Today programme 26 Notable contributors to the slot have included Rabbi Lionel Blue the academic Elaine Storkey the Sikh Indarjit Singh and Richard Harries the former Bishop of Oxford Over the years the slot has featured an increasing number of speakers from religions other than Christianity though Christian speakers remain in a substantial majority In August 2002 University of Oxford professor Richard Dawkins gave a non religious humanist thought for the day however this did not replace the regular thought and was broadcast an hour later as an alternative thought citation needed In 1983 the long running Prayer for the Day which had always gone on air at 6 50am was moved to 6 25am and replaced by a Business News slot It was later moved out of Today in the face of protest from listeners to 5 43am where it is still received by an appreciative audience citation needed The programme has a regular slot for sports news and items Sports Desk between 26 and 30 minutes past each hour regularly presented by Garry Richardson Jonathan Legard or Rob Bonnet and occasionally by Alison Mitchell Karthi Gnanasegaram or Chris Dennis 27 If Parliament is in session the previous day there will be a summary at about 06 50 Yesterday in Parliament 28 presented by two from Robert Orchard David Wilby 29 Rachel Hooper and Susan Hulme 30 Journalist and historian Peter Hennessy has made an assertion in one of his books 31 that a test that the commander of a British nuclear missile submarine must use to determine whether the UK has been the target of a nuclear attack in which case he has sealed orders which may authorise him to fire his nuclear missiles in retaliation is to listen for the presence of Today on Radio 4 s frequencies If a certain number of days said to be three pass without the programme being broadcast that is to be taken as evidence that the orders must be executed The true conditions are of course secret and Hennessy has never revealed his sources for this story leading Paul Donovan author of a book about Today to express some scepticism about it 32 However the longwave signal of Radio 4 is capable of penetrating to surface depths where submarines can rise although it does not have the range required to be heard at this depth far from the UK s coastal waters Message boards EditIn 2001 the Today programme created a system of message boards 33 allowing the users of its web site to challenge thinking on current affairs with all those contributing Available statistics indicate the amassing over five years of up to 18 000 separate discussions topic threads sometimes with as many as 3 000 contributions per thread However on 16 November 2006 the programme changed its board policy so that only the producers of Today could start a thread but all contributors could still join in with them This action appeared to have been unattractive 34 to past contributors and it seems many stopped dealing with Today in favour of other outlets 35 After the changes there were fewer contributions but on occasion contributions made by the public were featured on air in the Today programme Message boards dedicated to the Today programme were discontinued around mid 2008 and listeners were invited to use the general BBC Have Your Say board 36 Podcast EditA podcast Beyond Today was launched on 29 October 2018 Presented alternately by Tina Daheley and Matthew Price and aimed at a younger audience the production team contains the same number of women from black and ethnic minority backgrounds as it does men 37 Controversy EditToday found itself in the midst of controversy again in 2002 when its editor Rod Liddle wrote a column in The Guardian that was extremely critical of the Countryside Alliance and which raised questions about his own impartiality In the article he wrote that catching a glimpse of the forces supporting the Countryside Alliance the public schools that laid on coaches the fusty belch filled dining rooms of the London clubs that opened their doors for the first time to the protesters the Prince of Wales and of course Camilla and suddenly rather gloriously it might be that you remember why you voted Labour once again He resigned from his post on Today In the summer of 2003 Today once again found itself at the centre of allegations of political bias this time against a Labour government The controversy arose after Today broadcast a report by its correspondent Andrew Gilligan The report alleged that a dossier the British Government had produced to convince the British public of the need to invade Iraq had been sexed up deliberately exaggerated and that the government had known this prior to publishing it In his live 2 way interview with presenter John Humphrys just after 6 07 a m Gilligan asserted that the dossier and the Government probably knew that one of the main claims in the dossier was wrong Gilligan s anonymous source for the claim was Dr David Kelly a key adviser on biological weapons who had worked in Iraq though it was never established whether Dr Kelly had actually used the words Gilligan attributed to him In the furore that followed Gilligan s report David Kelly s name became public and he was forced to appear before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee Shortly afterward he was found dead having presumably committed suicide In the ensuing public inquiry the Hutton Inquiry which reported in January 2004 the BBC was heavily criticised This led to the resignation of the BBC s chairman Gavyn Davies the Director General Greg Dyke and Andrew Gilligan On Friday 5 November 2010 the programme failed to be transmitted due to 48 hour strike action at the BBC Transmission continued the next day in spite of ongoing industrial action as Evan Davis and Sarah Montague decided to break the strike citation needed Criticism Edit Radio 4 on the whole is good for using serious female presenters but the Today programme lets it down badly commented former Today newsreader Alice Arnold early in 2013 pointing out that Sarah Montague was then the only female presenter among the regular presenters 38 During 2010 editor Ceri Thomas acknowledged that the gender balance was not ideal but faced criticism for saying in an interview that the programme was not going to be the first place you ll see those changes because it s just too tough an environment for novices frankly 39 Radio 4 presenter Mariella Frostrup described the men involved in running the programme in an interview as a bunch of misogynists 40 but later retracted this statement by saying she had been careless in her vocabulary 41 In 2011 Guardian journalist Kira Cochrane and colleagues researched the female male ratio in the British media for a month Concerning Today they found 83 5 of the contributors were male and the remaining 16 5 female 42 The issue was thought important enough for culture minister Ed Vaizey to request a meeting with the BBC in January 2012 43 and for Director General George Entwistle at the start of his brief period in charge of the BBC to advocate that the next new Today presenter should be female 44 An interview with David Cameron conducted by John Humphrys in 2006 received 200 complaints concerning Humphrys aggressive approach and excessive interruptions 45 Ceri Thomas became the programme s editor shortly afterwards and was asked about this issue I m not going to rule out the confrontational interview as it is on occasion necessary A ll the evidence we ve got shows that the audience is overwhelmingly behind John Humphrys in general and support our right to do this kind of interviews 45 In a 2012 article decrying the BBC s attitude to science reporting Guardian science columnist Martin Robbins wrote The Today programme claims to be serious but seems to work on the basis that the best way to enlighten viewers is to take two people and force them into a sort of intellectual masturbation death match Graham Linehan appeared on the show last year to discuss his adaptation of The Ladykillers and found himself ambushed by questions that weren t just hostile but sometimes completely bizarre 46 Expert Women s Days intended by the BBC as a training exercise intended in part to increase the number of female interviewees on Today took place in several locations in 2013 47 See also Edit BBC portal Radio portalGreatest Painting in Britain Vote a Today listener poll in 2005 PM Radio 4 s early evening stablemate to the Today programme The World at One Radio 4 s afternoon stablemate to the Today programme The World Tonight Radio 4 s late evening stablemate to the Today programme Roundabout East Anglia BBC East s regional opt out from the Today programme in the 1970s Morning Sou West BBC South West s regional opt out from the Today programme in the 1970s and early 1980sReferences Edit Wogan s listenership close to 8m BBC News 2 February 2006 BBC News tops MPs survey BBC Newswatch 14 April 2005 Rajar radio figures round up Radio 4 s Today loses 300 000 listeners following departure of Jim Naughtie Press Gazette Press release Progressive Media International 19 May 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 According to figures released by Rajar it had an average reach of 6 8m listeners per week in the first three months of 2018 compared with 7 1m in the first quarter of 2015 Sherwin Adam 4 August 2016 Brexit effect helps BBC Radio 4 Today programme win record audience Today s weekly audience soared to 7 35m listeners The figure exceeded the programme s previous record high of 7 18m in 2011 according to figures from listening bureau Rajar Paul Donovan Benzie Isa Donald 1902 1988 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 4 March 2017 Lizzie Clifford Thought for the Day Beyond the god of the slots Ekklesia c 2009 Voice of Radio 4 Peter Donaldson dies at 70 BBC News 3 November 2015 Purves Libby 23 October 2007 Today turns 50 The Times London Retrieved 27 July 2010 Jack de Manio Radio Academy Hugh Chignell 2 September 2011 Public Issue Radio Talks News and Current Affairs in the Twentieth Century Palgrave Macmillan p 91 ISBN 978 0 230 34645 1 Hendy David 2007 Life on Air A History of Radio Four Oxford University Press p 50 ISBN 9780199248810 Today Programme Archived 1 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine BBC Press Office October 2007 Michael Leapman Obituary Brian Redhead The Independent 24 January 1994 Williams Zoe 3 April 2010 When Newsnight got a wife The Guardian Mahoney Elisabeth 10 January 2012 Radio review Today interview The Guardian Tim Frank s Blog BBC blogs archive Justin Webb joins Radio 4 s Today programme presenting team Press release BBC 26 August 2009 Jason Deans and Josh Halliday BBC s Mishal Husain to join Today The Guardian 16 July 2013 James Naughtie appointed Special Correspondent for Radio 4 Media Centre Nick Robinson to become a presenter on BBC Radio 4 s Today programme Media Centre Sarah Montague leaves BBC Radio 4 s Today programme after 18 years Radio Times a b John Humphrys hosts his final edition of Radio 4 Today programme BBC News 19 September 2019 Jones Ian 18 September 2019 Humphrys bows out as longest serving presenter in Today s history Belfast Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 14 October 2022 Grierson Jamie 30 January 2017 Sarah Sands named editor of BBC Radio 4 s Today programme The Guardian Retrieved 30 January 2017 Owenna Griffiths appointed editor of Today programme BBC Retrieved 27 December 2020 BBC Religion and Ethics BBC BBC Radio 4 Today BBC 1 January 1970 Westminster to your ears BBC News 13 May 2004 David Wilby Archived 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Susan Hulme Archived 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Hennessy Peter The Secret State Whitehall and the Cold War 1945 1970 Allen Lane The Penguin Press 256 pages ISBN 0 7139 9626 9 Paul Donovan All Our Todays Forty Years of Radio 4 s Today Programme London Jonathan Cape 1997 ISBN 0 224 04358 7 revised paperback edition is ISBN 0 09 928037 X Today Programme Message Board Archived 5 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine BBC Haines Lester 10 November 2006 BBC in Radio 4 messageboard punch up The Register James St George Archived 15 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Jamesstgeorge proboards32 com Have Your Say BBC News 1 January 1970 Tobitt Charlotte 29 October 2018 BBC launches Today spin off podcast with conversational and punchy tone to reach younger on demand audience Retrieved 23 November 2018 Alison Roberts Alice Arnold You look at men of a certain age on TV and think If you were a woman you wouldn t be there London Evening Standard 8 January 2013 John Plunkett Radio 4 s Today editor under fire over comments on female presenters The Guardian 31 March 2010 See also Ceri Thomas BBC Radio 4 the fog of gender war The Guardian 5 April 2010 where he responded to the criticism Alastair Jamieson Radio 4 Today programme run by misogynists says Mariella Frostrup The Daily Telegraph 26 May 2010 Andrew Hough Mariella Frostrup BBC Radio 4 presenter regrets misogynists jibe The Daily Telegraph 2 June 2010 Kira Cochrane Why is British public life dominated by men The Guardian 4 December 2011 Christopher Hope Eight out of 10 guests and presenters on Today programme are men complains minister The Daily Telegraph 24 January 2012 BBC boss next Today programme presenter should be a woman The Daily Telegraph 19 September 2012 a b James Silver Humphrys could see me off too The Guardian 10 April 2006 Robbins Martin 26 January 2012 The BBC s problem with science The Guardian Maggie Brown BBC to hold Expert Women s Days in Salford Glasgow and Cardiff The Guardian 18 March 2013External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Today programme Official website Today at BBC Online All Our Todays Forty Years of Radio 4 s Today Programme Book review Thought for the Day official site Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Luckhurst Tim 27 October 2007 Today 50 today The Independent Archived from the original on 27 October 2007 The Today Programme Review and analysis at the Journalism Now project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Today BBC Radio 4 amp oldid 1118824234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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