I promised you a diary from my last week at PM. Here it is…
- Eddie Mair reveals why he ended his BBC radio show two days early
- Eddie Mair: What I will and won’t miss about the BBC
- Eddie Mair explains his decision to leave the BBC: “None of my thinking has been influenced by pay problems”
Monday 6th August
While I’m sitting in Broadcasting House, an email arrives from Broadcasting House. The former is a building where I work, the latter is a programme I used to present on Radio 4. The email is from Scott – a fine producer who once toiled on Radio 4’s The Robert Peston Interview Show (with Eddie Mair). Scott was very adept at keeping the peace between Robert and me by constantly telling Robert that he was a much better broadcaster.
This is how the email begins:
“Hi Mr Mair, hope you are well. Would you be interested in reviewing the Sunday papers on Broadcasting House at some stage? With your broadcasting and journalism experience you would be a great addition to our line-up.”
Sarcastic git.
Because some undiscovered Morecambe and Wise has been rediscovered, we close PM with them singing Bring Me Sunshine.
Tuesday 7th August
Another email, this time from BBC Human Resources:
“Good morning Eddie. We have received notification of your resignation and note that your last day of employment will be 10 August 2018.”
It goes on to tell me where to find my P45 – in a recycling bin somewhere on the eighth floor – and further advises that I should follow the BBC tradition of handing back my security badge directly to Lord Hall, kissing him on both cheeks but being careful not to stare directly at the sun.
Wednesday 8th August, 1pm
Lunch with Jeremy Paxman for a Radio Times interview [read it in print next week] at a Viennese café, Fischer’s. I love a schnitzel. Jeremy arrives in shorts and with his dog – Derek. Ideally Derek would have been a schnitzel, but life’s never perfect. As the RT photographers snap away, I ask Jeremy where his tape recorder is. He gives me that look cabinet minsters endured for years and informs me he has a notebook and that’s all.
Shocking! I want to go on the record now, before I’ve seen the article he’s written, that all the so-called quotes have been misremembered and the article is a travesty of journalism. Unless he writes “lovely” – in which case, what an absolute titan of journalism he is.
Wednesday 8th August, 6pm
My third-from-last PM. A listener – Greg – who heard Monday’s Bring Me Sunshine suggests we play the Willie Nelson version, so we play out with that. Just Willie Nelson, then the bongs.
The output editor of PM tonight is the brilliant Eloise Twisk. It’s our last show together as she is off on Thursday and Friday. We look at each other just after our 6pm post-programme meeting and realise: that should really be my last show. It was a perfect ending, suggested by a listener. No fuss or faff, as I had wanted. Why not go out with that? It was not intended to be the last, but it felt just right.
So that’s what we did. Ended it there.
What’s next after PM?
I’m very happy to say Radio Times would like me to keep writing this column. And I will still be appearing in the BBC’s Grenfell Tower Inquiry podcast.
But what’s next for me on the radio is my new gig at LBC. On this page I will chart my rise and fall there.
Whatever happens, I will do my best to bring you sunshine, although I’m no Eric or Ernie. But I’m more than a Willie.
Eddie Mair’s new show on LBC begins in September
from Radio Times https://ift.tt/2P9adbB