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Mark Goodier

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Name
  
Mark Goodier

Education
  
George Heriot's School

TV shows
  
The Pop Years


Mark Goodier radiotodaycoukwpcontentuploads201505markgo

Similar People
  
Bruno Brookes, Simon Bates, Simon Mayo, Tommy Vance, Gary Davies

Jeff Young - Big Beat / Mark Goodier - BBC Radio One - July 1990


Mark Goodier (born 9 June 1961) is a British radio disc jockey who appeared on BBC Radio 1 between 1987 and 2002. He had two spells presenting the station's Top 40 singles chart, from 1990 to 1992 and from 1995 until 2002, and also temporarily presented the Breakfast Show during 1993. He has also presented shows on BBC Radio 2, Classic FM, 102.2 Smooth Radio and Real Radio, and appeared on BBC television as a recurring presenter of Top of the Pops between 1988 and 1996.

Contents

Mark Goodier Mark Goodier shows Mixcloud

Nirvana been a son mark goodier session


Early Career

Mark Goodier Wise Buddah

Goodier was born in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). His family moved to Llanfairfechan, Wales shortly after he was born, eventually settling in Edinburgh, Scotland when he was 8 years old. He was educated at George Heriot's School, in Edinburgh. He became a mobile DJ in Edinburgh and then joined a local Free Radio Station (Telstar) where his radio career began. Afterwards he went on to join the local stations Radio Forth and Radio Tay at the age of 19. After progressing through several jobs at stations in Scotland including Radio Clyde in Glasgow and at Metro Radio in the North East of England, he joined BBC Radio 1 in 1987, beginning a 15-year stint with the station, beginning with a two-hour Saturday night show.

BBC Radio One

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Mark Goodier co-presented the Liz and Mark weekend breakfast show (with Liz Kershaw), and he quickly progressed to a drivetime slot. He created The Evening Session and hosted between 1990 and 1993. During this period, he also presented the UK Top 40 chart countdown on Sunday evenings and was also an established host on Top of the Pops along with several of his Radio 1 colleagues.

Mark Goodier BBC Radio 2 Steve Wright in the Afternoon Mark Goodier sits in

Many acclaimed bands and artists recorded sessions for Goodier at the BBC's Maida Vale Studios, some of which were commercially released. In 1992, Nirvana's "odds-and-sods" release, Incesticide, featured several songs recorded for Goodier's BBC show. The album reached the top 40 on both sides of the Atlantic and achieved Platinum status in America. A further session recording was "Something in the Way", released on the 2011 edition of Nevermind.

Mark Goodier DJ Mark Goodier 55 suffers a stroke and cant voice Now Thats

When Simon Mayo left The Radio 1 Breakfast Show in 1993, Radio 1 boss Matthew Bannister approached Steve Wright to take over the slot. Wright said that he would not do so immediately after Mayo, and Bannister asked Goodier to stand in as host for four months in late 1993. He then shifted to afternoons, then back to his old drivetime slot in 1995. In the same year, he returned to the chart show after Bruno Brookes left the station.

Mark Goodier BBC Radio 2 Steve Wright in the Afternoon Mark Goodier sits in

In 1997, Goodier took on a Saturday and Sunday morning slot after quitting daily radio to establish his production company, Wisebuddah. He spent his final two years at Radio 1 only presenting the Top 40 show, before leaving the station entirely in 2002 owing to falling audiences and BBC bosses considering him "too old for the job." Goodier's final show was broadcast on 17 November that year, which also marked the 50th anniversary of the UK Singles Chart.

After BBC Radio One

Mark Goodier BBC NEWS Entertainment DJ Goodier leaves Radio 1

After permanently leaving BBC Radio 1, Mark Goodier presented the Emap-produced Smash Hits Chart, which competed with Radio 1's official chart and hit40uk. The Smash Hits Chart finished in March 2006, when Emap also began to broadcast the hit40uk chart show across their Big City Network of stations. He also presented the Classical Chart for Classic FM. He was a frequent stand-in on BBC Radio 2 when regular presenters were on leave.

Mark Goodier Former Radio 1 DJ Mark Goodier recovering after suffering stroke

On 1 April 2006, his new Real Top 40 shows began on the Real Radio network in Scotland, Wales and Yorkshire. Every show reflected sales and airplay for that area.

Mark Goodier is featured in a podcast promoting the "Top of the Pops" boxset alongside Miles Leonard, Malcolm McLaren and David Hepworth.

In March 2007, Goodier joined the newly relaunched Smooth Radio in London, as presenter of the weekday mid-morning show from 10am-1pm, his first daily show in a decade, and subsequently this show was networked to other Smooth stations and then on the national Smooth service. He left the station in December 2012 to focus on his company 'Wise Buddah'. He frequently provides cover on BBC Radio 2. In late February 2016 it was announced that he would present Pick of the Pops until July 2016 following the sacking of Tony Blackburn.

In addition, he has been (and still is) a voiceover artist for television adverts which promote new CDs, in particular the Now That's What I Call Music! UK series, of which he has been "the voice" since Now 21 which was released in early 1992, all the way until the release of Now 95 in late 2016, where he was replaced by TV presenter Matt Edmondson and then until Now 96 in early 2017, where he will be replaced by television actress Jane Horrocks. Mark Goodier has also hosted the annual Blackpool Illuminations Switch on Concert for two years on Real Radio and Smooth Radio. In June 2012, Goodier joined Spectrum FM, the English language music station in the Costa del Sol, Spain, to present a weekly Saturday morning show. He is a Fellow of The Radio Academy. Goodier has provided cover on BBC Radio 2 for presenters such as Steve Wright and Simon Mayo when they are on leave.

On 17th November 2016, Mark Goodier suffered a stroke at the age of 55. He has since made a quick recovery.

References

Mark Goodier Wikipedia