Scott Mills
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| Scott Mills | |
|---|---|
| Born | March 28, 1974 [1] Southampton, England |
| Known for | The Scott Mills Show |
| Employer | BBC Radio 1 |
| Occupation | Radio 1 Presenter |
| Salary | £130,000 per year. |
| Website | Scott's Radio 1 Pages |
Scott Robert Mills (born 28 March 1974 in Southampton, Hampshire) is an English radio DJ. Mills currently presents the 'drive time' show on BBC Radio 1, a national United Kingdom station with over 10 million listeners,[2] between 4pm and 7pm every weekday, which is called The Scott Mills Show.[1][3]
Contents |
Early radio career
Mills began his career aged only 16, as a DJ on his local Hampshire commercial radio station Power FM (previously a Capital Radio station, now owned by the combined GCap Media), after barraging the station with demo tapes.[1] He was given a chance to present a week worth of shows, and based on the success of this was immediately offered the 'graveyard slot' of 1am – 6am six nights a week, making him the youngest permanent presenter on mainstream commercial radio.[1] His popularity led to a quick move to the coveted 'drivetime' slot (late afternoon).
From Power FM, Mills moved on to GWR FM, then part of GWR Group, Capital's main competitor (although they are now merged to form GCap Media), and stayed there for two years.[1]
His next station was Piccadilly Key 103 (now just Key 103) in Manchester, owned by EMAP, the other major commercial radio operator, where he again moved quickly from the late night slot in to the mid-morning position.[1]
In 1995, Mills moved to the new London station of Heart 106.2, a Chrysalis Radio station.[4]
Mills has also been the voice of specialist 'in-store' radio station Homebase FM, broadcast only at branches of the DIY chain.[5]
Radio 1
Mills joined BBC Radio 1 in 1998 to present The Early Breakfast Show between the hours of 4am and 7am. In January 2004, Mills was moved to a weekend afternoon slot, which lasted only just over 6 months, as in July 2004, he moved over to the weekday early-evening slot, initially covering Sara Cox, who was on maternity leave,[6] but when she did not return to the slot, taking it over as his own Scott Mills Show.[4] Mills also provides holiday cover for other slots including The Chris Moyles Show.
The Scott Mills show, as it currently features, runs from 4pm to 7pm, Monday to Friday. It is co-presented by sport reporter and occasional presenter Mark Chapman (Chappers). The show also features assistant producer Laura Sayers.[7] The producer of the show is Emlyn Dodd, although he is referred to on air as 'The one who doesn't speak'.[8]
According to a leaked BBC document Scott Mills earns a Salary of £130,000 every year for his work with Radio 1.[9]
Regular features on the show include Laura's Diary, Flirt Divert, Innuendo Bingo, Rate my Listener and Your Call.[10] On a Friday, the show is modified with more music, in the form of the two features The Wonder Years, which features a different track from each sequential year to the present day, and Floor Fillers which is an hour of dance music.[11]
Scott has a number of catch phrases, including 'alright, treacle'.[citation needed] On Friday he opens the show by using another catchphrase 'it's only bloody Friday',[citation needed] a phrase he originally adopted from the previous afternoon show host, Sara Cox.[citation needed]
Television work
In addition to his radio work, he has also appeared on various television shows, playing both as a character and as himself. His main acting role was as reporter, 'Paul Lang' in the BBC medical drama Casualty, appearing in episodes in both 2006 and 2007.[12][13] He also had a cameo in the BBC Scotland soap opera River City after praising the show highly on his radio show.[14]
He has appeared as a contestant or guest on programmes including Mastermind, Supermarket Sweep, Children in Need, Hollyoaks, Most Haunted and Never Mind the Buzzcocks,[12] and has appeared in the show Identity, hosted by Donny Osmond.[15]
He narrated the music TV show Pop Years which, coincidentally, was also narrated by fellow Radio 1 DJ Edith Bowman. He has presented high-profile programmes including the Wednesday night National Lottery draw on BBC 1 and his own pilot (featured on the radio show) of Reverse-a-Word.[12] He now has a show called Radio 1 on Three on the Channel BBC Three from his Radio Show.
Private life
Mills has a brother, Wes, and his parents are separated,[6] although both feature in the show at sporadic intervals.[10]
Mills came out as homosexual to the press in 2001, in order to avoid tabloid style speculation.[16] He seldom discusses his sexuality on-air and rarely gives interviews on the subject. Occasionally on the show, however, unspecific and casual gay references are made, and Scott often jokes that he "doesn't have much luck with the ladies". In his Guardian interview he explained, "I'd just like to be accepted as a normal bloke who is gay and is on the radio and the television.".
According to the Independent on Sunday's Pink List for 2007, Mills is the 41st most influential gay person in Britain.[17] This ranking represents a rise of two places upon his position in the previous year's list.
References
- ^ a b c d e f Scott Mills Official BBC Biography. BBC Press Office (August 2004). Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ RAJAR Quarterly figures. RAJAR.
- ^ About the Scott Mills Show. BBC Radio 1. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ a b Scott Mills Biography. BBC Radio 1. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ My name is Scott part two. BBC Radio 1. Retrieved on 2007-08-01.
- ^ a b Unofficial biography of Scott Mills. Unofficial Mills. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ Scott Mills Show Team. BBC Radio 1. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ Emlyn Dodd Biography. Unofficial Mills. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ Is Chris Moyles worth 630k?. Guardian.
- ^ a b Scott Mills Features. Unofficial Mills. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ Friday Floor Fillers. BBC Radio 1. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ a b c Scott Mills Filmography. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ Scott Mills appearances. Holby.tv Fansite. Retrieved on 2007-07-12.
- ^ Innes, John. "Radio One DJ bids to give River City a wider show", The Scotsman, 22nd Sept 2004. Retrieved on 2007-07-12.
- ^ Wilson, David. "Guess who", The Guardian, 2007-08-25. Retrieved on 2007-09-05.
- ^ Wells, Matt. "Coming out nerves for Radio 1's early bird", The Guardian, April 7, 2001. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ "Pink list 2007", The Independent on Sunday, 6th May 2007.