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Andrew Collins

 
Wikipedia: Andrew Collins (broadcaster)
Andrew Collins

Born 4 March 1965 (1965-03-04) (age 44)
Northampton, England
Occupation Journalist, scriptwriter, broadcaster
Nationality British
Official website

Andrew Collins (born 4 March 1965) is an English journalist, scriptwriter, and broadcaster.

Contents

Life and career

Collins was born in Northampton and grew up in Northamptonshire, going to Weston Favell School. After studying graphic design at Chelsea School of Art, Collins started work at New Musical Express in 1989, subsequently taking up editorship of Q in 1995, having worked on Select and Empire (where he was briefly editor for three issues in 1995, before moving over to Q). He also formed a double-act with fellow music journalist Stuart Maconie, presenting the Sony Award-winning BBC Radio 1 show Collins and Maconie's Hit Parade, after forging their style on a daily comedy strand on Mark Goodier's BBC Radio 1 drivetime show, and Collins & Maconie's Movie Club on ITV.[1]

Collins is on many list shows that are shown on BBC/ITV/Channel 4 (e.g. I Love The 1980s). He stated on BBC Three's The Most Annoying TV Programmes We Love To Hate that he had appeared on 37 such list shows, and that this, the 37th, was going to be his last one.[2] He subsequently appeared on Heroes Unmasked on BBC Three. He devoted a full chapter to the experience of appearing as a talking head on list/nostalgia shows in his book That's Me in the Corner.

Politically, Collins was briefly a Labour Party member between the late 1980s and early 1990s, leaving after Labour's defeat in the 1992 General Election.[3]

In 1998, he published his first book, Still Suitable for Miners, an authorised biography of the singer/songwriter Billy Bragg, updated in 2002 and 2007.[4]

In 2001, Collins appeared, with Maconie and fellow New Musical Express journalist David Quantick, as a writer and performer in the BBC Radio 2 comedy show Lloyd Cole Knew My Father, based on their Edinburgh Festival show, in which they regaled their audience with anecdotes from their careers in music journalism. In 2004 he began presenting another Radio 2 programme, The Day the Music Died, a topical comedy show about current events in the record industry, which ran to six series, and was team captain on both series of the BBC Radio 4 pop quiz All the Way from Memphis. He also presented Banter on BBC Radio 4, whose third series aired in April 2008.

He became a presenter on BBC 6 Music in 2002, fronting the weekday Teatime slot from 4-7pm until April 2005, when he took over the 6 Music Chart (4-6pm on Saturdays) and a Sunday afternoon show (2-5pm), with a mix of music and guests, notably the comedian Richard Herring. In January 2007, the Chart was moved to Sundays (at 2pm) and reduced to an hour, while his Sunday show went to Saturdays (4-6pm)[5]. This arrangement lasted until the end of March 2007, when Collins stopped doing these two regular shows and effectively left BBC 6 Music, having clocked up five years with the station. He still deputises for other presenters on the network.

Collins is also film editor for the Radio Times [6], and a contributing editor to The Radio Times Guide To Films. He writes a monthly column called Whatever for The Word magazine. He cut his scriptwriting teeth on the soap operas EastEnders and Family Affairs. He was co-writer with Simon Day of the sitcom Grass, which debuted on BBC Three in Autumn 2003 and on BBC Two in January 2004. He co-writes the sitcom Not Going Out [7] for BBC One with Lee Mack, which won the Breakthrough Award at the Royal Television Society Awards in March 2007. The programme also won the Rose D'Or for Best Sitcom at the 2007 Rose D'Or TV Awards in Lucerne and was nominated for two British Comedy Awards in November 2007. Not Going Out was cancelled by BBC1 after the third series in 2009.[8] Collins contributed to BBC Three's Doctor Who Confidential and appeared in the Big Finish Productions Doctor Who audio drama LIVE 34, playing a radio newscaster.

He is perhaps best known for his three volumes of autobiography [4], humorous accounts of "growing up normal" in 1970s Northampton, struggling with art school in London in the 1980s, and forging a media career in the 1980s and 1990s: Where Did It All Go Right? (2003) (a Sunday Times and WHSmith bestseller), Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now (2004), and That's Me in the Corner, which draws its title from a line from the R.E.M. song "Losing My Religion", published in May 2007.

Collins and his family appeared as contestants on the quiz show Telly Addicts in 1990. They reached the semi-finals.

A keen web user, he contributes under his own name to assorted forums and message boards. He writes a blog called Never Knowingly Underwhelmed.

In August 2006, he was awarded an Honorary Fellowship at the University of Northampton (which he attended when it was still called Nene College in 1983-84). In 2007, he was made patron of Thomas's Fund [9], a Northampton-based music therapy charity for children with life-limiting illnesses.

In February 2008, with Richard Herring he started to produce a podcast under the name Collings and Herrin. Initially fortnightly, the podcast went weekly in March 2008. In April 2009, it reached number six in the iTunes comedy podcast charts. He and Herring recorded live podcasts at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2008 and 2009 (a run of five which sold out); for anti-sweatshop campaigners No Sweat in London; and in Brighton to packed audiences. The Guardian described the podcast as having "the spirit of Derek and Clive."

Books

  • Still Suitable for Miners: Billy Bragg: The Authorised Biography (2002, rev. ed.), ISBN 0-7535-0691-2
  • Friends Reunited: Remarkable Real Life Stories from the Nation's Favourite Website (2003), ISBN 1-85227-039-X (ed.)
  • Where Did It All Go Right?: Growing Up Normal in the 70s (2003), ISBN 0-09-188667-8
  • Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now: My Difficult Student 80s (2004), ISBN 0-09-189691-6
  • That's Me in the Corner: Adventures of an Ordinary Boy in a Celebrity World (2007), ISBN 0-09-189786-6

References

  1. ^ "Biography" Never Knowingly Underwhelmed, website
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ "Labour Conference Late News Just In" Never Knowingly Underwhelmed blog entry, September 2008
  4. ^ a b "Books" Andrew Collins website
  5. ^ [2]
  6. ^ "Radio Times reviewers Radio Times website, retrieved 18 June 2009
  7. ^ "Andrew Collins" IMDB, retrieved 15 June 2009
  8. ^ "Not Going Out Any More" Chortle news, 30 March 2009
  9. ^ "Who's Who" Thomas's Fund website, retrieved 15 June 2009

External links


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