Danny Kelly (BBC WM presenter)
Danny Kelly | |
---|---|
Born |
Daniel Vincent Kelly 1970/1971 Liverpool |
Occupation | Radio Broadcaster |
Danny Kelly (born 1970/1971) is a British radio presenter based in Birmingham.
Life
Kelly was born in Liverpool. He is 6'5" tall, a fact that he enjoys telling his listeners.
Career
Danny Kelly has had a varied career working as a used car salesman and chef before moving into local radio 10 years ago. He started as a reporter at BBC Radio Coventry and became a roving reporter on the Adrian Goldberg breakfast show at BBC/WM. He has presented many shows at BBC/WM; the early morning show, the lunchtime show, the afternoon show, the late show, the Sunday morning show and the afternoon show again.
One of the more significant items that occurred during his programme was the BBC/WM Christmas Toy Appeal 2003. It took Danny 5 days to walk from Pebble Mill to the Mailbox collecting toys. A simple enough task but for some reason he went via West Bromwich, Wednesbury, Walsall, Bloxwich, Willenhall, Wolverhampton, Sedgley, Dudley and Merry Hill.
On 18 May 2010, the BBC was forced to give out an apology after Kelly made a practical joke live on air that Queen Elizabeth II had died. He began playing the national anthem whilst telling listeners to his radio show that he had some 'astonishing news' to deliver. He had been half-way through his 2 hour afternoon radio programme on BBC WM when the announcement was made. His producer, Mark Newman, interrupted and informed him, 'You can't say that'.[1]
References
External links
- Danny Kelly biography on BBC WM web site
- BBC Radio WM
- Wolverhampton Express and Star: Danny Kelly rejoins BBC WM daytime lineup
- The Stirrer: More changes at BBC WM
- News article on Danny Kelly buying Wayne Rooney the piglet