Sneha Girap (Editor)

Michael Watts (journalist)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Michael Watts


Years active
  
1955 – present

Occupation
  
Journalist

Education
  
Nottingham High School

Michael Watts (journalist) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
October 18, 1938 (age 85) (
1938-10-18
)
Nottinghamshire

Books
  
"I Say, I Say!": Great Britain's Best Corny Jokes and the Debatable Wit and Wisdom of Michael Watts

Dj michael watts boiler room x budweiser houston dj set


Michael Watts (born 18 October 1938) is a British journalist and broadcaster best known for his ‘Inspector Watts’ column in the Sunday Express and other publications, which ran for over 35 years. He is not to be confused with another journalist of the same name, who was the US editor of Melody Maker for much of the 1970s.

Contents

Hustlin swishahouse michael watts chopped up remix lil keke kyleon mike jones


Journalism career

Watts, born in Nottinghamshire and educated at Nottingham High School, began in journalism at age 16 as a reporter on the Nottingham Evening News. After four years there, he became London editor of The Viewer television magazine for a year, before joining the Sunday Express in 1960. There, he was variously gossip column editor, deputy news editor, and deputy editor in Manchester, and started the paper's Town Talk diary.

In 1969 he began The World of Michael Watts, a consumer column laced with social comment and humour. This concluded with the Great Corny Joke Contest, offering a cash prize of a "Crisp Oncer" - at £1 "the meanest prize in Fleet Street", and one which became relatively meaner as the years passed. In the 1980s, as the pound coin was replacing the pound note, Watts bought several hundreds of the latter from a bank so that the Crisp Oncer prize could continue. In carrying out investigations and taking up readers' battles with companies and bureaucracy, Michael Watts became known as "Inspector Watts" - and the column continued for 22 years, until he left the Sunday Express.

However, he started the column again in the relaunched London Evening News and, the following year, in Saga magazine. Then in 1989 the Sunday Express asked Watts to bring it back to them, which until 1991 he did.

His column and broadcasts were often commented upon by other publications, and in addition to continuing in Saga, the column also ran for five years in the Westminster Review, and from 2002 to 2005 in Active Life magazine (still handing out Crisp Oncers). Watts now freelances.

Broadcasting

Watts's radio work for BBC Radio 4 has included twice-weekly consumer spots on Up To The Hour, and presenting The Weekly World and News Stand. Plus much for LBC.

Awards

The Michael Watts column twice won the Consumer Writers' Award, in 1978 and 1986.

Published works

Author of I Say! I Say! Great Britain’s Best Corny Jokes and the Debatable Wit and Wisdom of Michael Watts, published by Sidgwick & Jackson, 1971 (ISBN 0 283 978066).

References

Michael Watts (journalist) Wikipedia