词条 | James Richardson (presenter) |
释义 |
| name = James Richardson | image = | imagesize = | caption = | birthname = James Oliver Richardson | birth_date = {{birth date and age|1966|5|29|df=yes}} | birth_place = Bristol, England, United Kingdom | nationality = British | othername = | occupation = Television presenter Journalist | years_active = 1992–present | spouse = | domesticpartner = | website = }} James Oliver Richardson (born 29 May 1966 in Bristol) is an English television presenter and journalist. He is best known as a former presenter of Channel 4's Football Italia programme and former host of the Football Weekly podcast on guardian.co.uk. He currently hosts BT Sport's The UEFA Champions League Goals Show, "World's Strongest Man" for Channel Five, The Totally Football Show podcast,[1] and the Truth & Movies podcast.[2] He is also employed by the Premier League featuring in content related to Fantasy Premier League and for overseas rights holders.[3] He is an A.S. Roma fan,[4] with his allegiance coming from a girl he met in 1990.[4] He is also a gifted linguist speaking his native English, Italian, French, Spanish and Portuguese.[5] Football ItaliaRichardson was the anchor of Football Italia on Channel 4 from 1992 until 2002.[6] Football Italia saw Richardson become well known and the show was cult viewing for football fans in the UK. Football Italia consisted of two weekend shows. On a Saturday morning, Richardson would present Gazzetta Football Italia, a magazine show which would round up the previous weekend's games, as well keeping viewers up to date with the latest Italian football news. It would feature Richardson sitting in a café in a picturesque setting, usually with a cappuccino, a pastry or gelato, and a pile of Italian sports newspapers which he would use to show viewers the latest football stories and headlines.[7] He would interview players and managers on a regular basis for the show, since he was able to speak Italian.[8] Meanwhile, on a Sunday he would host live coverage from the stadium of one of the top Italian games that particular day. He also presented La Partita and Mezzanotte, a Sunday night and mid-week show respectively with highlights of one of the top matches of the weekend. Later broadcasting careerFrom 2002 until 2005, Richardson moved with the Serie A rights first to British Eurosport live coverage, then to Bravo TV's Football Italia Live and the return of Gazzetta Football Italia.[6] Between 2007 and 2009, he co-presented Setanta Sports' The Friday Football Show and Football Matters shows with Rebecca Lowe. In 2011, Richardson also had a short stint on the BBC regional football programme Late Kick Off, for the South, West and South-West region. Prior to his move to BT Sport in August 2013, he presented ESPN's coverage of live Italian Football. At BT Sport he hosted live Serie A matches and the Sunday night round-up show, European Football Show, until its cancellation in 2017. He fronts their The UEFA Champions League goals show since BT Sport won the rights to the competition. Since 2016, together with Mark Sutherns and Jules Breach, he has hosted the Fantasy Premier League Show by Premier League Productions. It is also available for viewing on the Premier League website and also the Premier League Facebook Page. Richardson has also presented non-football related content and presented Bravo TV's first live PDC darts coverage alongside Dave Gorman during the 2010 European Darts Championship. He has also presented British Eurosport's live Tour de France cycling coverage between 2005[9] and 2013.[10] Since 2011, Richardson has hosted the World's Strongest Man television coverage.[11] Other mediaRichardson also contributes articles to the football magazine, FourFourTwo, as their Italian football correspondent. He has contributed articles to The Guardian. He hosted The Guardian's The World Cup Show for the 2006 World Cup.[12] This turned into The Guardian Football Weekly podcast series featuring Monday and Thursday shows with Richardson as host and a panel of football journalists discussing the footballing week's events, both in England and across Europe. It was here he consolidated his reputation as a broadcaster who used puns and humour.[13] Richardson also hosted a number of Football Weekly Live Shows which played to sold out venues around the UK. In summer 2017, after spending just over a decade with them, Richardson left The Guardian and Football Weekly, to join the brand new podcast The Totally Football Show. This podcast is produced by Muddy Knees Media, of which Richardson is a shareholder, along with other former Football Weekly alumni: Iain Macintosh, and producer Ben Green.[14] In November 2017, they staged their first live show in The Glee Club, in Birmingham. Providing Internet content, Richardson hosted the online coverage of England's World Cup 2010 qualifying game with Ukraine on 10 October 2009 alongside former England coach Sven-Göran Eriksson.[15] Outside of football, in late 2015, Richardson became an online movie critic, creating his own YouTube channel JimboVision.[16] In 2017, he started hosting a movie podcast Truth & Movies.[2] References1. ^ The Totally Football Show [https://www.thetotallyfootballshow.com/], accessed 3 December 2017 2. ^1 Truth & Movies, [https://www.acast.com/truthandmovies], accessed 3 December 2017 3. ^ sportsvibeTV, James Richardson Talks Italian Football, 20 Sep 2013, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9As39pR9GAc], accessed 3 December 2017 4. ^{{Cite news|url=https://forlackofabetterreview.com/2018/10/02/james-richardson-the-staple-of-english-pundits-that-float-around-dont-really-have-any-expertise-to-bring-to-it/|title=James Richardson: “The staple of English pundits that float around don’t really have any expertise to bring to it”|date=2018-10-02|work=For Lack Of A Better Review|access-date=2018-10-03|language=en-US}} 5. ^ Jane Morgan Management, James Richardson, , accessed 3 December 2017 6. ^1 Ingle, Sean, The Guardian, "Arrivederci, James, and thanks for the memories", 20 Dec 2006, [https://www.theguardian.com/football/2006/dec/20/sport.europeanfootball], accessed 3 December 2017 7. ^ Football365, "A Football365 love letter to… Gazzetta Football Italia", 9 Jul 2017 , accessed 3 December 2017 8. ^1 The Observer, "Arriverderci Roma, buongiorno Reading", 12 August 2007, [https://www.theguardian.com/football/2007/aug/12/sport.obsmagspecial8], accessed 3 December 2017 9. ^ RCUK, Tour de France 2005 on TV, 1 Jul 2005, [https://roadcyclinguk.com/news/event-news/tour-de-france-2005-on-tv.html], accessed 3 December 2017 10. ^ Sport On The Box, "Tour de France 2013 live on ITV4 & Eurosport", 23 Jun 2013, , accessed 3 December 2017 11. ^ British Film Institute, James Richardson , accessed 3 December 2017 12. ^ The Guardian, World Cup Show, June/July 2006 [https://www.theguardian.com/football/series/theworldcupshow], accessed 3 December 2017 13. ^ The42.ie, "Woof! It’s our 25 favourite AC Jimbo intros from Football Weekly", 27 Dec 2013, , accessed 3 December 2017 14. ^ Williams-Grut, Oscar, Business Insider, "Football journalist Iain Macintosh wants to build a podcast empire — the Totally Football Show is just the start", 30 Sept 2017, , accessed 3 December 2017 15. ^Gibson, Owen, The Guardian, "Online broadcaster defends decision only to show England match on web", 5 Oct 2009, [https://www.theguardian.com/media/2009/oct/05/ukraine-england-football-perform-online], accessed 3 December 2017 16. ^ Butler, Mark, Wow24/7, "James Richardson: from cult football presenter to YouTube movie critic", 22 Mar 2016, , accessed 3 December 2017 External links
10 : 1966 births|British podcasters|British television presenters|British television journalists|BT Sport presenters and reporters|Football people in Italy|Living people|The Guardian journalists|People from Bristol|English expatriates in Italy |
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