Eddie Mair (born 12 November 1965) is a Scottish former broadcaster who was a presenter on BBC radio and television. He hosted BBC Radio 4's daily news magazine PM from 2003 to 2018, and also presented companion Saturday show iPM, as well as intermittently presenting Any Questions? as a substitute for Jonathan Dimbleby. Primarily a radio presenter, he had occasional stints working for BBC television as a stand-in presenter on Newsnight, and on The Andrew Marr Show in 2013 following Marr's stroke. Mair left the BBC in August 2018, having worked for the corporation for over 30 years. He went on to present a drive time programme on LBC every weekday from September 2018 until August 2022, after which he retired from broadcasting.

Early life

Mair was born in Dundee. His amateur broadcasting career is reported to have started by using the public address system in his school, Whitfield High School, (now Braeview Academy School) in the Dundee housing scheme, Whitfield.

Career

Mair's professional career began after he rejected a university place in order to present on Radio Tay, a local Dundee station. He moved on to present Good Morning Scotland and Reporting Scotland, then Eddie Mair Live in the mid-morning slot for Radio Scotland. In 1993, he hosted Breakaway, the weekly 'travel and leisure' programme on BBC Radio 4. He then joined BBC Radio 5 Live when it began in 1994 presenting the Midday with Mair news show.

Mair was the host of the Sunday current affairs programme Broadcasting House from its launch in April 1998, until 2003, when he took over PM and Fi Glover became presenter of the weekly show. On both programmes, Mair mixed serious journalism with witty and satirical commentary. After reading out the weather forecast, he would invariably encourage listeners with a jaunty "Do wrap up", whether the forecast was cold or warm.

After Nick Clarke died in 2006, Mair substituted for Jonathan Dimbleby as the presenter of Any Questions?. Standing in for Andrew Marr on his Sunday morning show on 24 March 2013, Mair interviewed London Mayor Boris Johnson asking critical questions about past known misdeeds such as lying to a minister and commenting: "you're a nasty piece of work". Patrick Wintour in The Guardian commented that "Johnson's reputation had taken a severe pounding", while Dan Hodges in his Telegraph blog thought Mair's approach was a "disgrace". Johnson himself said that Mair had done a "splendid job".

Mair has also presented Newsnight on BBC Two and The 7 O'Clock News on BBC Three. For leap day in 2012, Peston co-hosted the PM programme with Mair, and, in 2015, they co-hosted the show "The Robert Peston Interview Show (With Eddie Mair)"

Mair was the original host of the 2003 BBC Two series Time Commanders. From 27 to 30 October 2014, Mair guest-presented four editions of The One Show with Alex Jones on BBC One.

On 29 February 2016, to the accompaniment of Nat King Cole playing Let There Be Love, Valerie Singleton proposed marriage to Mair live on Radio 4's PM programme, in-line with the tradition that women may propose marriage on one day only – 29 February. In the same spirit of gentle humour, he promised to think about it and give her an answer in 2020.

Mair's BBC earnings were between £300,000 and £350,000 for the 2016-17 financial year. The Guardian reported that he refused to take an earnings cut as part of the BBC's gender-equality adjustments made in 2017 and 2018. His autobiography A Good Face for Radio : Confessions of a Radio Head was first published in 2017. which concluded with part 204: The Phase 2 Report and the End of the Inquiry about the fire in Grenfell Tower in London, in September 2024. Starting from part 114, Mair was no longer presenting this podcast, handing over to Kate Lamble, the then producer of the podcast series.

On 1 July 2018, Mair announced that he would depart the BBC, presenting his last PM show on 17 August 2018. On the following day it was announced that Mair would be joining LBC, and that his first show for the station would be broadcast in September 2018. In fact, Mair presented his final PM show on 8 August 2018, although he did not acknowledge this during the broadcast.

Awards

In 2005, Mair won the News Journalist award at the Sony Radio Academy Awards. He has also won a Sony Award for Speech Broadcaster of the Year, one for Best Breakfast Show, and was nominated for two Sony awards for Midday with Mair on 5 Live. The PM programme also won a Gold award the same year for its coverage of Hosni Mubarak's resignation as president of Egypt.

Mair was listed as the fifth most powerful person in British radio in a 2005 poll in the Radio Times, and 28th most influential LGBT person in The Independent on Sundays Pink List 2013.

References

  • Eddie Mair on LBC
  • Eddie Mair's diary The Guardian, 12 June 2002