Colin Murray
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Colin Murray | |
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Born | March 10, 1977 (age 30) Belfast, Northern Ireland |
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Known for | His night-time BBC Radio 1 show, Presenting Fighting Talk on BBC Radio Five Live, Sports presenting on Five |
Occupation | Radio and Television Presenter |
Website | Radio1 profile |
Colin Murray (born March 10, 1977) is a BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio Five Live DJ and television presenter from the Dundonald area of east Belfast, Northern Ireland.
His career path includes digging graves at the age of 16, and print journalism for the Belfast News Letter and publications in Canada, as well as running the music magazine BLANK.
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[edit] Radio
Colin Murray joined BBC Radio 1 with Donna Legge in 1999 as one of the original hosts of Radio 1's Session programmes. Their show went out every Thursday night between 7.30 and 9.00 focusing on the best new music from Northern Ireland. Colin and Donna quickly built a good rapport and went on to deputise for John Peel, Steve Lamacq and Mary Ann Hobbs. By 2001, Colin was also branching out into deputising for Daytime Radio hosts, so that in October 2001 he spent two weeks filling in on Late Drive for Dave Pearce. By 2002 he had caught the eye of Channel 4 and in February 2002 ceased deputising at Radio 1 to host Channel 4's Morning Show- RI:SE.
However, RI:SE didn't turn out to be a ratings success and in December 2002 Murray was unveiled as the replacement to Steve Lamacq on the Evening Session. However, this move was only a temporary measure by Radio 1 since in July 2003 XFM signing Zane Lowe took over the 8-10 pm slot on a full time basis.
By late 2003, Murray had teamed up with Edith Bowman (his former co-host from RI:SE) to host the Colin and Edith show. From September 2003, the show went out between 10am and 1pm every Saturday and Sunday in the slot now held by Vernon Kay. During his partnership with Bowman they also deputised for Sara Cox on the Breakfast Show. Murray also presented a late night music show on Channel 4, under the 4music strand. The show, Ear Candy, was a mix of music, interviews and comedy skits. However the comedy skits were described as 'weak observations, poorly performed', and after an editorial meeting, Murray decided to concentrate solely on the music.
By March 2004, Colin and Edith moved to weekday daytimes taking over the Lunchtime Show from Mark and Lard. On their 2 years on the Lunchtime Show, they grew their audiences to 5 million - a 10 year high.
In June 2006, Radio 1 announced that Colin and Edith would part company, with the latter continuing on the lunchtime show solo and Murray taking over a new weeknight 10pm - Midnight show, formerly held by John Peel.
The new late night show began on 25 September 2006 and includes a mix of New Music and alternative classics. Features include the College Drop in, Radio 1's Blackhole and Four Reasons Why. The show is usually live, unless Murray does a football match on Five, when he usually tapes the radio show.
Recent reports have claimed that the BBC pulled a commercial for Murray's radio show which featured him being released skywards attached to 500 helium balloons, in light of an accident suffered by Top Gear host Richard Hammond, but the BBC have denied these reports, saying that the aforementioned commercial will simply not be shown, and that other commercials had been filmed and will be shown instead. [1]
Murray currently presents BBC Radio Five Live's Fighting Talk, a sport related, comedic panel game of competitive banter, similar in style to ESPN's Around the Horn, and has deputised for Simon Mayo on Five Live.
[edit] Television
TV work has included presenting shows on BBC Three - including Glastonbury coverage - and on Channel 4, where he reported for RI:SE and presented Born Sloppy with Sara Cox. In 2005 he became the new co-presenter of late night American Football on five, with expert pundit Mike Carlson. However he had to leave in the 4th week of the 2006 season due to his new work commitments at Radio 1 with a show that finishes at midnight (an hour before the NFL on five starts).
He also commentates broadcasts of the European Poker Tour, alongside John Duthie. He appeared alongside Edith Bowman on Sky Sports 1's hit show Soccer AM. He has presented reports for Jo Whiley's The Cut and presented EastEnders Revealed on BBC Three. He has also recently begun presenting Sudoku Street-Cred on UKTV G2. When the Red Bull Flug Tag was held in Belfast Colin Murray was the presenter.
He is also the anchorman for Five's UEFA Cup coverage, often alongside Pat Nevin, moving John Barnes to a roving reporter role.[1]
He performed in Comic Relief does Fame Academy in March 2007 where he finished fourth. Johnny Vaughan took over the Fighting Talk hotseat for one day only in place of Colin Murray on 10th March 2007 and Nihal stood in for him on Radio 1 from 7 March to 15 March.
[edit] Other activities
While in Canada, he became a fan of baseball's Toronto Blue Jays. His passions involve the aforementioned NFL (specifically, the Chicago Bears), Poker, Watersports, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) wrestling, Boxing and his love of Liverpool F.C..
He also DJs at student union events around the country. He was the first ever act to perform (DJ) at the University of Central Lancashire's new Students' Union building, 53 degrees, at its opening in 2005.[2]
Colin has also compered at the Leeds leg of the last three Carling Weekend music festivals.
[edit] Trivia
- Murray had 5 stars tattooed on his left wrist when Liverpool F.C won the European cup for the 5th time. This was done live on air.
- He is one of the various people thanked on the Final Straw album by Belfast band Snow Patrol, being one of the first DJs to give the band national airplay.
[edit] References
- ^ murray to join barnes on five’s new-look football line-up. five (2006-02-02). Retrieved on 2007-03-23.
- ^ 53 Degrees Opens its Doors. uclan (2005-04-13). Retrieved on 2007-03-26.