Roger Mosey

Roger Mosey (born 4 January 1958)[1] is a British broadcasting executive who worked as BBC's Director of London 2012 Olympic Games coverage. His previous roles for the corporation have included being Editor of Today on BBC Radio 4; Controller of BBC Radio Five Live; as well as Head of BBC Television News.

Mosey became the Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge in October 2013.[2]

Early life

He was born in Bradford in 1958 and educated at Bradford Grammar School, followed by Wadham College, Oxford, where he received a degree in modern history and modern languages.[3] He appeared on University Challenge in 1978, as a member of the team representing his college.

Career

After university he joined Pennine Radio, Bradford, as a Community Affairs Producer; and his BBC career began in 1980 when he joined BBC Radio Lincolnshire as a reporter. His first job in network radio was on The Week In Westminster, and he then moved to Today Programme as a producer and to the BBC's New York bureau[1] before becoming editor of PM in 1987.[4]

He was editor of Radio 4's Today Programme from March 1993 until his appointment as Controller of BBC Radio Five Live at the beginning of 1997. Under his editorship, Today Programme won Sony Gold Awards in 1994 and 1995, a British Environment & Media Award and was named Radio Programme of the Year by the Broadcasting Press Guild in 1995.

BBC Radio Five Live was named the Sony National Radio Station of the Year 1998; and BBC Television News won a number of Royal Television Society awards for journalism, including Programme of the Year for Newsnight (2002) and the Ten O'Clock News (2004). The Ten O'Clock News also received BAFTA awards in both 2004 and 2005.[3]

He recruited James Naughtie to join the Today presenting team and introduced Nicky Campbell, Victoria Derbyshire and Richard Littlejohn to Five Live.[4] He brought Dermot Murnaghan and Natasha Kaplinsky to the BBC to present Breakfast. He is a Fellow of The Radio Academy.[5]

In 2003, when Head of News at the BBC he was asked to head up a landmark workstream looking at the BBC's Values. As Head of Sport he cancelled Grandstand[6] after a 48-year run and oversaw the move to Salford Quays in 2010. He was in charge of the BBC's coverage of the 2012 Olympics, and was replaced as Head of Sport by Barbara Slater,[7] who oversaw the move of BBC Sport to MediaCityUK in Salford Quays in 2011. He became the BBC's Editorial Director in May 2013,[8] but this appointment proved to be short lived. Upon leaving the BBC, Mosey highlighted the various biases in the work of the organisation. Writing in The Times, he noted that the organisation was too left-wing, had failed to "give enough space to anti-immigration views or to EU-withdrawalists" and had uniformity in its views. Mosey proposed that the organisation should share the licence fee with others.[9]

In 2013, Mosey was elected to succeed Richard Bowring as the Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge.[10] Announced on 2 July, he took up the role in October 2013.[2] In 2013 it was announced Mosey would be the Chair of Bishop Grosseteste University's university council.[11]

Personal life

His interests include football (he is a Bradford City fan) movies, and reading thrillers and political biographies.[1]

References

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
Richard Bowring
Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge
2013present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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