Wes Butters
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Wes Butters | |
Born | May 4, 1979 (age 27) Salford, England |
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Occupation | Radio Presenter |
Website | Wes' Galaxy Manchester pages |
Wes Butters (born Wesley Lee-Butters in Salford, Greater Manchester, 4 May 1979), is a popular English broadcaster.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Butters attended Buile Hill High School in Salford, and studied at the University of Salford between 1995 and 1997 where he gained an National Diploma in Design & Media Communications, followed by a BA (Hons) Television and Radio between 1997 and 1999.
[edit] Radio Career
Upon joining AA Roadwatch he shortened his name to Wes Butters and after a year's reading traffic and travel bulletins on local North West radio stations (and stints on The Wave (Blackpool), Wish FM (Wigan) and Century 105, he was offered the evening show on Century 106 in Nottingham. He left in 2000 to host the mid-morning show and become Head of Music for Galaxy 105-106 in Newcastle.
[edit] Radio 1
In February 2003, after massive speculation, he took over the Official UK Top 40 show on BBC Radio 1, and it was renamed The Official Chart Show with Wes. It changed its format to include more coverage of the album charts and ceased playing all the Top 40 singles to address the chart relevancy debate.
He regularly stood in for Scott Mills - first on early breakfast, then on drive-time. And for Chris Moyles on the prestigious Radio 1 breakfast show on Bank and Christmas Holidays.
Working closely with Top of the Pops he interviewed hundreds of popstars including Kylie Minogue, Destiny's Child, George Michael and The Black Eyed Peas.
In November 2004 it was revealed that Butters would leave Radio 1 the following February and the chart would under go more massive changes to its format.
Butters was regularly heard on the BBC World Service too. He sporadically presented Top of the Pops, Wright Round the World (sitting in for Steve Wright) and was used as their voice for Live 8.
[edit] After Radio 1
Soon after his final chart rundown on January 30th 2005 the press announced the launch of podshows.com, a joint venture by Butters and fellow broadcaster Daryl Denham. It was the world's first professional pod-casting company using household names such as Tony Blackburn, Paul Gambaccini, Gary Davies and Terry Christian to record tailor-made programmes for MP3 players.
This coincided with the release of his Crazy Frog record (that he'd premiered on an early breakfast show the previous November). Under the guise of Pondlife the record went in at Number 11 and remained in the UK Top 40 for 5 weeks.
[edit] Wes@Breakfast
In October 2005 it was revealed that Butters had agreed a deal with Galaxy and returned to the airwaves at Galaxy Manchester, immediately boosting figures to their highest ever level, winning a Silver Sony award for Best Breakfast Show and an Arqiva nomination for Best UK Presenter.
[edit] Television and writing
Wes has appeared on many TV programmes such as Never Mind the Buzzcocks, Top of the Pops, Record of the Year, Liquid News, Celebrity Fame Academy, BBC1 news, and numerous talking-heads and children's shows.
For voice-overs he did the Top of the Pops rundown, An Audience with Take That, An Audience with Lionel Ritchie, and The Brit Awards.
He wrote an amusing article for The Guardian newspaper that can be found below, and according to a Carry On website he's working on a book about the series for its 50th anniversary next year (2008).
[edit] Trivia
- He is a fan of Laurel & Hardy and the Carry On films.
- He has appeared in Love Actually, Shameless, and a Matt Goss video.
- He studied for his National Diploma in media at the same University building as Peter Kay and Christopher Eccleston.
Preceded by Mark Goodier |
BBC Radio One chart show presenter 2003 - 2005 |
Succeeded by JK and Joel |