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Episode details

Radio 3,06 Mar 2026,14 mins

SeriesYou, Me and the Wireless

Episode 5

The Essay

Available for over a year

Legendary broadcaster Gillian Reynolds looks back at her life and the role of radio in it. An award-winning journalist in print and on air, Gillian Reynolds was a radio critic for over 50 years, and a lifelong listener. Her sharp observation, warm wit and unerring sense of what works in sound are celebrated in this series of essays, where she looks back at a life and career inextricably intertwined with the radio. Presenters, comedians, dramatists, politicians, station controllers, commissioners – Gillian knew them all, and shares fascinating memories over her distinguished career, and her deep love for the medium of radio. You Me and the Wireless discusses how and why radio works so well in different genres, with highlights from a long and distinguished career in both commercial and public sector broadcasting. "Radio is more popular with BBC audiences than TV, delivering 43 percent of the BBC's total audience…….radio is perceived as a medium of the future not a dusty relic…….There are ways of telling a story on radio... audio does better than any other medium, more intimately and with more immediate impact." Gillian Reynolds, The Daily Telegraph December 2015 After writing for The Guardian from 1967 to 1974, Gillian was the radio critic for The Daily Telegraph for more than 42 years, from 1975 to 2018. She then continued her career at The Sunday Times, where she wrote about radio until 2021. She was the first Programme Controller of Radio City in Liverpool in 1974, the first woman in the UK to hold such a post. Gillian Reynolds is a Fellow of The Radio Academy, a trustee of the National Museum in Liverpool, a Fellow of the Royal Television Society and an Honorary Fellow of her old Oxford college, St Anne's. Essay 5 Radio drama has a long and illustrious history - Gillian picks out a few highlights from the theatre of the air. Archive clips: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Quandary Phase Fit the Nineteenth The Comedy of Danger 1973 Paul Temple and the Geneva Mystery: See You in London Leaving by Vaclav Havel Writer and presenter : Gillian Reynolds Producer : Polly Thomas Sound designer : Paul Cargill Exec producer : Jon Sen A Thomas Carter Projects production for BBC Radio 3

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