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Nancy Banks Smith

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Name
  
Nancy Banks-Smith


Nancy Banks-Smith wwwazquotescompublicpicturesauthors8ad88ad

Nancy Banks-Smith (born 1929) is a British television and radio critic. Born in Manchester and raised in a pub, she was educated at Roedean. She was a writer for The Sun in the 1960s, and left the newspaper in 1969 when it was bought by Rupert Murdoch who turned it into a sensationalist tabloid. She also worked briefly for the Daily Express in the 1960s. Banks-Smith began writing for The Guardian in 1970, with her television column becoming a leading feature of the newspaper. She has remained with The Guardian for over 40 years, and as of 2016 writes a monthly column for the paper entitled "A month in Ambridge", reviewing recent developments in the radio soap opera The Archers.

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Awards

In 1970 she was recommended for the Order of the British Empire, which she declined.

Career

  • 1951–1955: Northern Daily Telegraph, reporter
  • 1955: Sunday Mirror, women's section
  • 1955–1960: Daily Herald, reporter
  • 1960–1965: Daily Express, feature writer
  • 1965–1969: The Sun, TV critic
  • 1969–present: The Guardian, TV and radio critic
  • References

    Nancy Banks-Smith Wikipedia


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