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Topic: Jeremy Vine


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In the News (Tue 29 Dec 09)

  
  tScholars.com | Jeremy Vine
Jeremy Vine (born May 17, 1965, Epsom, England) is a current affairs presenter on BBC radio and television.
Vine was educated at Epsom College in Surrey and Durham University (Hatfield College), graduating with a first-class degree in English.
Vine is one of the most prominent openly Christian broadcasters in the UK and has also presented numerous religious-themed programmes for the BBC.
www.tscholars.com /encyclopedia/Jeremy_Vine   (450 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine
BBC presenter, Jeremy Vine was born in Epsom in May 1965.
Vine is well known for his jobs as presenter of Newsnight since 1999, as well as a host on BBC Radio 2's Jeremy Vine show, for which he won Speech Broadcaster of the Year in May 2005.
Jeremy Vine's report for Newsnight in April 1999 on South African police brutality won the Silver Nymph at Monte Carlo, and resulted in the suspension of 22 officers.
www.biogs.com /snippets/vine.html   (297 words)

  
  Jeremy Vine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jeremy Vine (born May 17, 1965, Epsom, England) is a current affairs presenter on BBC radio and television.
Vine was educated at Epsom College in Surrey and Durham University (Hatfield College), graduating with a first-class degree in English.
Jeremy is the older brother of comedian Tim Vine.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Jeremy_Vine   (452 words)

  
 OFF THE TELLY: Reviews/2004/Jeremy Vine Meets ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Jeremy wanted to read out some of his favourite Costello lyrics.
Jeremy went on to challenge Costello over his views on the war in Iraq.
Neither was it Jeremy's to hold him to account for not having all the answers.
www.offthetelly.co.uk /reviews/2004/jeremyvine.htm   (1130 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine - Speakers Biography - Celebrity Speakers Limited
Jeremy Vine is probably best known as a former presenter of BBC 2's flagship program Newsnight, He currently hosts his own radio show on BBC Radio 2 and he retains his screen presence with The Politics Show on BBC 1 every Sunday lunchtime.
Jeremy is most remembered for his controversial award winning 1999 South African Police Brutality Report which rocked the South African Police Service and resulted in 22 police officers being prosecuted.
Jeremy speaks about his experiences of working for the BBC in assignments that have taken him around the world.
www.speakers.co.uk /csaWeb/speaker,364CA31   (241 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited | Archive Search
Vine's agent, Alex Armitage of Noel Gay, nevertheless confirms the deal is done: "It is a fantastic journalistic job, Jeremy will become the senior journalist of Radio 2, at the middle of the day - the nation's village pump, where people get together".
Jeremy Paxman, 52, with the impetus of the interviews with Tony Blair behind him, seems set to rule the programme for the next 10 years.
Vine and team are expected to go into a huddle to rethink the show in the autumn, but are determined not to frighten off regular listeners with startling innovations.
www.guardian.co.uk /Archive/Article/0,4273,4426347,00.html   (1328 words)

  
 BACP - Media - Media coverage
Jeremy Vine: Phillip the argument is that we need to sort problems out for ourselves, not go to a third party we don't even know.
Jeremy Vine: So when they raise the issue of the budgie the counsellor would say hang on you should not be here talking about something as silly as this, you haven't got a problem.
Jeremy Vine: The point that David is making Phillip is that, of its nature, wanting to go into a room with someone you don't' know and hearing about their most personal intimate emotional landscape is a bit weird.
www.bacp.co.uk /media/mc/mar2004/vine.html   (2150 words)

  
 Observer | It's the JV prog
The Jeremy Vine show promises to be a sharper, more news-driven and 'interactive' radio programme than Young's, a BBC institution for 30 years that has enticed every Prime Minister since Alec Douglas-Home.
Vine, under instructions from station bosses to inject the 'warmth' that his award-winning TV reports have sometimes lacked, confesses that succeeding Sir Jimmy is 'a frightening thing to do'.
But behind the hard-nosed reporter, friends talk of a softer Vine: his poetry, for instance, which he wrote intensively in Africa as a way of absorbing the brutal cold facts he was witnessing.
observer.guardian.co.uk /print/0,3858,4576974-102273,00.html   (1419 words)

  
 Tim Vine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tim Vine (born 1967 in Cheam, Surrey) is an English stand-up comedian.
Vine was also one of the regular team of comedians to write for and appear in the ITV comedy series The Sketch Show, and Vine is currently playing the role of namesake Tim in the BBC One situation comedy Not Going Out.
Tim's brother is Jeremy Vine, the British television journalist and presenter on BBC Radio 2.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tim_Vine   (527 words)

  
 Media: Can Jeremy do jolly? Independent, The (London) - Find Articles
Vine got his first big break, an invitation to join the Today programme, when the editor at the time, Phil Harding, grabbed him in a corridor at Broadcasting House.
Vine, a graduate trainee not yet accustomed to the pace of network news, came into the office without the essential reporter's kit of passport, driving licence and credit card.
Vine knows the playlist Radio 2 hopes to introduce in the next few years if Moir's success in attracting middle-youth to the station is to continue.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_200206/ai_n12626299   (910 words)

  
 David Rowan: The Observer: Jeremy Vine profiled   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
As the new lunchtime voice of Radio 2, 37-year-old Jeremy Vine is 44 years younger than his eminent predecessor, whose long-drawn-out final 'Ta Ta' even provoked an unsuccessful campaign by MPs to save him.
The Jeremy Vine show promises to be a sharper, more news-driven and 'interactive' radio programme than Young's, a BBC institution for 30 years that has enticed every Prime Minister since Alec Douglas-Home.
Vine, under instructions from station bosses to inject the 'warmth' that his award-winning TV reports have sometimes lacked, confesses that succeeding Sir Jimmy is 'a frightening thing to do'.
www.davidrowan.com /2003/01/observer-jeremy-vine-profiled.html   (1583 words)

  
 The Gordon Poole Entertainment Agency   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Jeremy Vine presents the aptly titled 'Jeremy Vine Show' on BBC Radio 2, daily between 12 and 2 and 'The Politics Show' on BBC 1, Sunday’s at 12.00.
Previously Jeremy was part of the team presenting BBC 2’s flagship political programme 'Newsnight'.
Jeremy bided his time filling in for more high-profile presenters such as Michael Buerk and Brian Redhead before being appointed political correspondent under John Sergeant.
www.gordonpoole.com /speakers/JeremyVine.htm   (522 words)

  
 The Scotsman - S2 - A Vine that's surely ripe for the plucking
He first came to light on Newsnight as the Jeremy it was safe for politicians to talk to, before debunking to Radio 2 to become The New Jimmy Young.
Vine’s wardrobe has easily been the most compelling facet of his interview series entitled Jeremy Vine Meets...,which has slipped seamlessly into the Kilroy 9am slot.
Here’s Vine’s spiel: he points out to his subject how successful they are, then asks them about their upbringing and whether they think that was linked to their success.
thescotsman.scotsman.com /s2.cfm?id=542672004   (776 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine - The London Speaker Bureau
Jeremy Vine presents the aptly titled Jeremy Vine Show on BBC Radio 2, daily between 12 & 2 and The Politics Show on BBC 1, Sunday’s at 12.00.
A University of Durham graduate, Jeremy joined the BBC as a news trainee in 1987 his apprenticeship saw him work in Belfast for two years, where he was occasionally drafted in to read the morning news bulletins.
Jeremy’s proudest of his report from South Africa, when his story about police brutality led to 22 officers being suspended.
www.londonspeakerbureau.co.uk /speakers/printSpeaker.aspx?speakerid=135   (419 words)

  
 BBC News | NEWSNIGHT | Another chance to see
Jeremy Vine spoke to a parent who is worried about giving her children the vaccine and to the Public Health Minister.
Jeremy Vine spoke to the Deputy Chief Medical Officer, Dr Pat Troop, who is one of the government team in charge of drawing up our plans for dealing with bioterrorism.
Jeremy Vine asked the Head of Andersen UK whether his firm's credibility had been fatally undermined.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/events/newsnight/1319141.stm   (1810 words)

  
 durham21 | interviews | Vine for Chancellor?
Durham graduate Jeremy Vine is one of the most well respected political journalists around.
It is surprising to hear that Jeremy was not involved in any political activity during his spell at the University.
It was that job that saw Vine and his team travelling around Britain in a 1976 banged-up Volkswagen camper van, with the 'Newsnight' logo spray painted on the sides.
www.durham21.co.uk /archive/archive.asp?ID=2116   (979 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine to front BBC One's Panorama
Jeremy will continue to present the lunchtime show on BBC Radio 2, where his blend of music and hard-hitting journalistic discussion has grown the audience left by his predecessor Jimmy Young.
Jeremy Vine is to join the Panorama team as the programme's main presenter when the show moves to its new slot, in January 2007, of 8.30pm on Monday evenings on BBC One.
Jeremy also had a distinguished period as a BBC News correspondent in South Africa, where his exclusive report on South African police brutality won the Silver Nymph at Monte Carlo.
www.a2mediagroup.com /?c=137&a=10944   (916 words)

  
 New Statesman - Radio - Rachel Cooke
Vine is a proper radio presenter (I cannot quite see him as a DJ - though, with his fondness for the Smiths and New Order, he rather fancies himself as one) who manages to be both energetic and calming.
In my mind's eye, I saw Vine stalking towards a large wooden box containing one half of a half-naked woman, while a man in evening dress tried to fight him off with a large wand.
But no, it seems that Vine's new chummy persona is for real (that, or his old curled lip was something he had to practise in front of a mirror).
www.newstatesman.com /200510240036   (776 words)

  
 The Harvard Crimson :: Writer Profile :: JEREMY S. SINGER-VINE
JEREMY S. In 1961, less than a year after graduating from Harvard College, Michael C. Rockefeller ’60 joined the Peabody Museum’s 1961 New Guinea Expedition as a sound recordist and photographer.
JEREMY S. Intimate and serene, Sharon Lockhart’s “Pine Flat” collection is a beautiful, yet ambiguous exploration of the lives of children in a small community in Eastern California.
JEREMY S. Baldomero Alejos, whose photographic documents of life in the Ayacucho region of Peru currently hang in the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) building, considered himself a tradesman, not an artist.
www.thecrimson.com /writer.aspx?ID=1202236   (526 words)

  
 BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Jeremy Vine: Add your views
Jeremy Vine is the bees knees and a pleasure to listen to.
Jeremy Vine by his age is more in touch with the subjects and music I want to hear.
Jo Knight, UK As someone who was interviewed by Jeremy Vine in the period during which he was standing in for JY, I found him to be unnecessarily aggressive in his questioning a - as though he was trying to make a news story controversy in the style of Newsnight.
news.bbc.co.uk /2/hi/entertainment/2631283.stm   (1255 words)

  
 David Rowan: Interview: Jeremy Vine, BBC Radio 2/BBC1 (Evening Standard)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
JEREMY Vine thinks interviewers are far too hostile towards politicians.
What began as an interview to promote Vine's latest project, a new BBC1 books series, is starting to look like a pitch to replace David Frost as the corporation's soft-touch political question-master.
Vine's argument conveniently echoes the view of Michael Grade, the BBC chairman, who recently warned its journalists against "the knee-jerk cynicism that dismisses every statement from every politician as, by definition, a lie".
www.davidrowan.com /2005/02/interview-jeremy-vine-bbc-radio-2bbc1.html   (1360 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine
Radio 2's Jeremy Vine is an excellent corporate host, very effective at question and answer sessions, chairing debates, seminars and award ceremonies as well as presenting in-house videos.
The report Jeremy is proudest of was his exclusive for Newsnight in April 1999 on South African police brutality.
Jeremy was born in Epsom in May 1965.
www.nyt.co.uk /jeremy.vine.htm   (456 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine at AllExperts
Vine was educated at Epsom College and Durham University (Hatfield College), graduating with a first-class degree in English.
After several stints as a stand-in for Jimmy Young on Radio 2 in 2001-2002, he took over the 12 midday show permanently in January 2003, though the show became shrouded in controversy when it emerged that Young had not retired voluntarily as had originally been claimed.
In 2005 Vine won the best speech broadcaster award at the Sony Radio Academy Awards and on December 14th was announced as Peter Snow's replacement manning the election graphics, including the famous Swingometer from May 2006.
en.allexperts.com /e/j/je/jeremy_vine.htm   (436 words)

  
 BBC - Radio 2 - Jeremy Vine - Biography
But while Birt went on to become Director General, get a knighthood and have the use of three offices, Jeremy's main ambition is still to be recognised by the staff who run the car park.
From the news traineeship Jeremy became a reporter on the Today programme, then moved to Westminster as a political correspondent.
Born in Epsom in May 1965, Jeremy loves Chelsea Football club, the films of Alfred Hitchcock, the poems of WH Auden, and he is married to Rachel.
www.bbc.co.uk /radio2/shows/vine/biography.shtml   (369 words)

  
 Jeremy Vine Radio & TV Star [Archive] - UKOnAir.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
The Politics Show which Jeremy does on Sundays is broadcast live and I would have thought he would be a very much "must do it live" type of presenter.
Jeremy Vine is sounding brilliant in the lunchtime slot on 2,he is fast establishing himself as part of R2 furniture, he IMO would be mad to give up the Radio2 daytime slot.
Or another option would be that Wogan is extended to 10, Jeremy Vine's Prog moves into a 10-12 slot and the Ken Bruce show moves to lunchtimes.
www.ukonair.com /forums/archive/index.php?t-2686.html   (606 words)

  
 Ken Stott :: 'Jeremy Vine Meets..'. ::
This was the second series of the BBC1 Daytime chat show 'Jeremy Vine meets...' and featured five actors billed as the 'greatest British actors and actresses of our generation'.
Interviews were filmed in January 2005 and were broadcast from 9:30 -10:00 each week-day morning from 7th to 11th March, with Ken's interview being the last in the series.
It's a stylishly shot production which promises personally revealing interviews as Vine encourages the stars to reflect on their lives, loves, career highs and lows.
www.kenstott.info /vine.htm   (119 words)

  
 Heber Jentzsch Vs. Scientology
Jeremy Vine voice-over: "The question of just how accessible Scientology actually is, initially held up the Independent Television Commission's decision to allow to allow the church to complete it's move from American poster sites to British TV.
Jeremy Vine voice-over: "A signal of the importance of the ITC decision was the presence in London of Scientology's world leader..."
Jeremy Vine: "Some though have very clear memories of the 1984 high court judgement in which Scientology was described as 'A religion based on lies and deceit, whose real objectives are money and power' and that was a judge speaking!
www.holysmoke.org /heber/heber04.htm   (1246 words)

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