Sentences with phrase «when radio programmes»

Jane was still in demand when radio programmes needed someone to fill the Social Policy / Woman / Nonprofessional / Humour slot; though one producer had firmly added «BIM» to her contact details, meaning «Best in Morning.»

Not exact matches

During Andrew Marr's Radio Four book programme, when attempting to mitigate the admitted disaster of Chernobyl with its estimated 40,000 casualties, Dr Lovelock commented that «Chernobl was now a wonderful place for wildlife as they were not disturbed by large human communities».
Writing for the Radio Times, she says she's left «reaching for the remote» when the programme is aired on Sunday afternoons.
Speaking on Radio 4's Sunday programme, he said: «Because people may be white you assume they're guiltless and when they're black you assume they must be guilty.»
«I find it very disrespectful that I am linked with somebody else's job when he is still in the job,» Bruce told BBC Radio 5 live's Sportsweek programme.
Because I thought I heard Vince Cable engaging in a spot of low politics when he discussed the pensions error on Radio 4's Today programme, naughty boy.
When we covered it on my radio show, virtually everyone who got in touch with the programme was against it on the basis that we haven't got the money, many councils do it already, or isn't that what Child Benefit is supposed to be used for.
On Saturday nights in our house the two came together, after the football reports were finished on the radio and when Take the Floor started, a BBC programme that kept traditional music alive when its popularity declined, particularly among younger Scots.
Clegg told Radio 4's Today programme: «The Conservative party have been tearing themselves [apart] on Europe so they have now plucked out of thin air an arbitrary date, 2017, when a referendum would take place... on the back of what I predict will be a largely synthetic renegotiation of the terms of Britain's membership that won't satisfy their backbenchers.
«In fairness to the present prime minister one has to accept that she has been dealt a rotten hand because this matter, the decision to cover it up, if there was such a decision, as appears to be the case, was taken in the dying days of the Cameron administration when spin doctors were the rule in Number 10 Downing Street,» Lewis told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
The NDC deputy General Secretary retorted, «When they prevented people like Kwesi Pratt from appearing on GTV programmes, stop NDC from appearing on Radio Ghana programmes, state media like Graphic and Times will not cover pro-NDC events that is what we call abuse of incumbency.»
The shadow health secretary, Andrew Lansley, refused to endorse the proposal when he was asked about it on BBC Radio 4's Today programme this morning.
Maybe it was Ed, for instance, who described how he, Brown and Charlie Whelan were listening to Blair's party conference speech on a car radio when Brown suddenly started heckling («He didn't want that... He opposed that...») And surely it could only have been Whelan, still spinning even in his political grave, who described the Chancellor's fury after being «ambushed» about the Ecclestone donation on the Today programme, for who else but our Charlie would say «Gordon went mental»?
Shortly after, during an interview for BBC Radio 4's Today programme in June 1991, Young described the homeless as «the people you step over when you come out of the opera».
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: «It's right that when somebody has been found guilty nobody should share a platform.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4's PM programme, Lord Heseltine said he had been minding Kim one day in 1964 when the dog appeared to have developed a problem with its paw.
Labour deputy leader Tom Watson told Radio 5Live's Pienaar's Politics programme that his party's MPs would support Theresa May when she wants to trigger Article 50.
«He clearly feels that me saying... that no one forces anyone to kill innocent people in Paris, to blow up the London underground, to behead innocent aid workers in Syria, that when I say they are entirely responsible for that... he clearly interpreted that as an attack on him,» he told Radio 4's Today programme.
On the Radio 4 Today programme this morning Justine Greening tied herself up in knots trying to argue that grammar schools represented increased choice, an argument which falls apart when you consider one fundamental, and uncomfortable truth, which is that, for those children who fail the 11 +, there is little or no choice at all.
John Humphrys from BBC Radio 4's Today programme put that question to her when they met at Tracey Emin's new exhibition Love is What You Want, at the Hayward Gallery in London.
ICSTIS has expressed its concern at the rise in TV specific complaints and has proposed a new licensing scheme in its consultation for premium rate telephone services when promoted in television and radio programmes.
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