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George Lamb

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Name
  
George Lamb

Role
  
Radio presenter


Height
  
1.96 m

Uncles
  
Wesley Lamb

George Lamb Former BBC 6 Music DJ George Lamb joins Talksport Radio

Full Name
  
George Martin Lamb

Born
  
20 December 1979 (age 44) (
1979-12-20
)
London, England

Education
  
St Christopher School, Letchworth Garden City

Occupation
  
Television and radio presenter

Years active
  
2007–2012, 2015–present

Parents
  
Linda E. Martin, Larry Lamb

Siblings
  
Eloise Laurence, Eva-Mathilde Lamb, John Lamb, Vanessa Clare Lamb

Grandparents
  
Jessie White, Ronald Douglas Lamb

Similar People
  
Larry Lamb, Eloise Laurence, Clare Burt, Rick Edwards, Karima Adebibe

Profiles

The George Lamb Radio Experience


George Martin Lamb (born 20 December 1979) is an English radio and television presenter, currently presenting Football Tonight on BT Sport. In 2012, Lamb presented the Channel 4 game show The Bank Job.

Contents

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He is the son of actor Larry Lamb.

George Lamb George Lamb Photos Orange British Academy Film Awards

The restaurant george lamb dr rob yeung


Education

George Lamb Georgelamb Tumblr

Born in Hammersmith, West London, Lamb was educated at St Christopher School, a boarding independent school in Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire.

Radio

George Lamb George Lamb up to date information

Lamb's radio career peaked with presenting an eponymous daytime BBC Radio 6 Music show, for two years from October 2007 to November 2009, before being moved the early weekend mornings for 6 months, then leaving 6 Music in May 2010. His show mixed shock jock banter with his Ministry of Sound DJ co-host, Marc Hughes; Jamaican Patois, dancehall music and loud foghorns.

George Lamb How to Survive City Living George Lamb

Lamb's last known radio work was a 2010 Starbucks-sponsored Spotify slot and a brief stint at TalkSport.

Television

Lamb's television career started in 2007 when he replaced Alex Zane as the host of the second series of BBC reality show Celebrity Scissorhands and returned in 2008 for the third series. He has also presented The Restaurant, Road To V and Young Butcher of the Year, as parodied on Harry Hill's TV Burp, and also parodied by Ray Peacock and Ed Gamble on The Peacock and Gamble Podcast.

Lamb was the presenter of Big Brother's Little Brother (or BBLB) from mid-2008, taking over from Dermot O'Leary who had presented BBLB since 2001. He first presented the show with co-host Zezi Ifore, though she was sacked halfway through the series, leaving Lamb the sole presenter. For the final series of BBLB in 2010, Emma Willis joined Lamb as co-presenter. Willis moved with Big Brother to Channel 5 when the rights were bought from Channel 4, however Lamb did not.

On 19 February 2010, he presented EastEnders Live: The Aftermath alongside Kirsten O'Brien, interviewing the cast and production team after the first live episode of EastEnders.

He took part in a reality TV show on ITV2 called The Parent Trip with his father, actor Larry Lamb. On 31 March 2011, he appeared in an episode of Celebrity Juice with his dad.

Lamb presented a programme on BBC Three exploring the world of legal party pills and herbal highs.

Lamb also took part in Channel 4's game show The Million Pound Drop Live on 29 October 2010, alongside his father, Larry Lamb. They survived the final question with £50,000 for the charity Plan.

In 2012, Lamb presented the Channel 4 game show The Bank Job.

Personal life

Lamb was born in West London to an English father, actor Larry Lamb, and a Scottish mother, Linda Martin from Dundee and grew up in Fulham. He has three sisters called Vanessa Clare Lamb born in 1969, Eloise Alexandra Lamb, born in 1999, and Eva-Mathilde Lamb, born in 2003. He supports Dundee United and Fulham. Lamb is also known for his trademark Grey Hair™.

In March 2010, he supported Global Cool by going on a flight-free holiday to Barcelona with his friend and fellow TV presenter Rick Edwards.

BBC 6 Music controversies

Lamb's former 6 Music show proved controversial, being atypical of 6 Music – for example, its shock jock style encroached upon youth-oriented BBC Radio 1's daytime public service remit. It marked a significant diversion from 6 Music's principally novel, trans-era eclectic-musicologistic origins and tradition. This gambit proved controversial, driving an attrition of 6 Music's long time listeners, provoking rival petitioning websites: anti- GetLambOut.org.UK and pro- KeepLambIn.co.UK. Similarly, national media reviews were polarised Radio veteran Paul Gambaccini said Lamb's interview with Ray Davies of The Kinks was "worst interview in the history of broadcasting".

In May 2008 Lamb was reprimanded for pledging his support on air for Boris Johnson in the London mayoral race. In 2014, he criticised the BBC, claiming "You can't have opinions at the Beeb".

References

George Lamb Wikipedia


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