Trevor Baker
Trevor the Weather was the nickname of Trevor Baker, a Welsh weather forecaster.[1] He joined the Met Office in 1941 and worked all over the UK (as well as a stint in Hong Kong between 1953 & 1956) before being seconded to the BBC in 1962.[1] After a few months he moved to Southern Television's evening news magazine Day by Day. He worked with a number of different co-presenters including Cliff Michelmore, Barry Westwood and Fred Dinenage and his role gradually expanded (reading out congratulatory messages, writing a book[2]) until eventually he was given his own show The Trevor Baker All Weather Show.[1][3] Baker remained in his position when the franchise changed to TVS (Television South) in 1982. He carried on until 1987. When people in Southampton said "Trevor says it's going to be fine today", nobody ever said "Trevor who?". He had achieved that ultimate accolade, accorded to very few, of being immediately identifiable by his first name. In all he was on-air for 25 years - at the time Britain's longest serving TV weather forecaster.[1]
See also
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 "Trevor Baker". About BBC Weather. BBC. 26 March 2010. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
- ↑ Baker, T: Science and the Weatherman (1974) Exeter, A Wheaton & Co ISBN 0-08-017656-9
- ↑ 1980, produced by Bryan Izzard and directed by David Pick (BFI Archives)