I see there is a new presenter or new to me for Saturday and Sunday Breakfast. Adam Tomlinson does anyone have any information, etc on him?
New Presenter for Weekend Breakfast Show
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Originally posted by Black Swan View PostI see there is a new presenter or new to me for Saturday and Sunday Breakfast. Adam Tomlinson does anyone have any information, etc on him?
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Black Swan
Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostOh Lord. Martin Handley needs to be chained to the studio chair.
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Originally posted by Black Swan View PostI totally agree. I have taken a few days off and caught the end of Breakfast this morning which was Dire. Sarah was playing something from the movie Xanadu. I don't know this movie and the excerpt didn't pique my interest to see it.
any road up, here is a shot in the dark...but this bloke
does Drive time on Radio Solent and he is, TBF, a good presenter.(in the sense of being professional and slick).
He also has a good knowledge of pop music.
I really wouldn't be at all surprised if he got a trial on R3.....I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostOriginally posted by Black Swan View PostI see there is a new presenter or new to me for Saturday and Sunday Breakfast. Adam Tomlinson does anyone have any information, etc on him?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/northyorkshire..._feature.shtml
We have had cause to discuss Mr Tomlinson before....
Let me take you back to the summer.... (*cue: harp arpeggios*)
Originally posted by Caliban View Post
Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI'm not warming to the announcer though, whose grasp on the piece seems to be pretty superficial and who has just informed me that "there are no really outstanding moments" in the opera. And - oh dear - he's just invited listeners to tweet their comments "so we can all join in with this".Originally posted by DracoM View PostThe presenter knows absolutely nothing. He's reading out prepared questions which come straight out of Noddy's Siegfried Book for Kiddies, he is not engaging in debate or getting the best out of the speaker. Dreary and totally unnecessary.
Groanworthy tat.
Couldn't agree more - I confess to having switched off with a four-letter word*
Patronising, Noddy stuff indeed...
*Not the chap's actual four-letter first name either. This is the person:
The curse of "breakfast" strikes again...
"Adam Tomlinson is Radio York's voice of breakfast for the weekends.
Presenting both Saturday and Sunday breakfast programmes means plenty of early starts.
As presenter of BBC Radio York's Saturday breakfast show, Adam Tomlinson knows a thing or two about early mornings and gardening.
He's on air between 6am and 9am every Saturday morning.
For the first two hours there's a fine mix of music and chat, plus your chance to win great prizes on "Hit & Miss", the competition that gets you guessing the ages of celebrities, will you be the next champion."
The obvious choice to present a live performance of Siegfried
I mean - look at his cheery face!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Black Swan: you were lucky only to catch the end. She seemed to spend the whole morning reading out dreadful soi-disant haiku submitted by listeners, telling us in that patronising tone she has how clever and wonderful they were (when they weren't). Something that I'm sure she's done before. Petroc doesn't do this sort of thing. Nor does Martin. Why does she?
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post...
He also has a good knowledge of pop music.
I really wouldn't be at all surprised if he got a trial on R3.....
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostOh, is that who it was? I wondered. Not impressed, not one bit.
Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostOh dear, oh dear!
Talk about forced labour!
An idiot presenter just about summed that up for me.
He sounded well out of his depth.Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostAs I keep on pointing out R3 has morphed into R2 (as was) thus knowledge of the last decade's pop music is what will be required in future - R2 can thus concentrate on the 20+ year olds who being major spenders are sought by just about every other radio station.
In some market sectors I suspect older people are actually bigger spenders. A few years ago I read that the average age of a Porsche driver was around 55-57.
Many middle class families are smoothing things out, by older members passing money down to sons and daughters - for example:
Buying them cars
Buying them houses or flats, or putting deposits down
Paying tuition fees
Paying off student loans
Bailing them out ...
Etc.
There always was an element of this, but the scale of transfers is surely much higher now. I had to work to buy an old banger of a car when I was around 21 - but now it seems that often new ones are 18th birthday presents. OTOH I didn't have to pay student fees or repay student loans.
Another family member who is financially astute has sugested that the current student loan arrangements are actually roughly equivalent to a 9-10% "graduate" tax for those who pay their loans back. This is based on an observation that the current interest rates for student loans are sufficiently higher (no longer an obvious "almost free" money supply for the better off) than previous loans that many who start to pay their loans off (kicks in at around £21k salary) will very possibly only succeed in paying off interest for quite a while. Some will get highly paid jobs and pay off early, but many won't. In the meantime, young people who do not have the support of middle class families may have an even rougher time, and some talented young people will not even take the chance on "better" educational opportunities. In some cases this is a great shame.
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