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James Whale Radio Show – Produced by Rob Oldfield.

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Ep.142 – Warning this show may contain subliminal messages – James Whale Radio Show

Posted on June 9, 2016August 21, 2025 admin

James tells us what to vote subliminally, has a bit of a rant about Noel Edmunds, Tech Talk, ABBA, Finish

Continue readingEp.142 – Warning this show may contain subliminal messages – James Whale Radio Show

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Ep.71 – With Peter Tatchell – James Whale Radio Show

Posted on January 29, 2015August 21, 2025 admin

Peter Tatchell .. This week James talks to Peter Tatchell about his lifelong career fighting for equality and human rights.

Continue readingEp.71 – With Peter Tatchell – James Whale Radio Show

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Radio Aire Phone-in (Audio)

Posted on September 12, 2013 admin

Montage of callers to the James Whale Radio Show on Radio Aire

James Whale

For over fifty years, The James Whale Radio Show shook the airwaves and shaped the sound of British talk broadcasting. James Whale, who passed away in 2024 after a long battle with cancer, leaves behind a legacy that few broadcasters can match — sharp, fearless, and always unafraid to say what others wouldn’t.

Whale’s journey began in the mid-1970s at Metro Radio in the north east. His style was unlike anything else on local radio: acerbic, witty, and often provocative. Audiences quickly learned that with Whale at the mic, nothing was off-limits. What might have been too controversial for others became his calling card, and it won him a fiercely loyal following.

That following carried him onto bigger platforms. Over the years Whale made his mark on the BBC, ITV, Talksport, and LBC. At LBC, he tripled the station’s drivetime ratings in just four years, proving his brand of forthright broadcasting could draw in mass audiences. Later, at TalkTV, he reached new viewers with a show that blended debate, humour, and his trademark no-nonsense interviews.

In the digital era, Whale reinvented himself yet again with The James Whale Radio Show Podcast, co-hosted with Rob Oldfield. The podcast captured Whale at his most unfiltered — funny, direct, sometimes outrageous, always entertaining. Fans cherished it as a more intimate version of his show, but following his death the podcast came to an end, closing one of the last chapters of his extraordinary career.

James Whale was more than just a broadcaster; he was a pioneer who transformed talk radio into a space where disagreement was not only tolerated but encouraged. He thrived on challenging his listeners, sparring with callers, and injecting humour into even the fiercest debates. Off-air, he was admired for his resilience, particularly as he continued to broadcast while undergoing cancer treatment.

Though Whale is gone, the echoes of his voice remain — in the memories of those who tuned in night after night, and in the many presenters who followed his path. The James Whale Radio Show may have ended, but its spirit endures: bold, provocative, and never afraid of the truth.

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