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Darryl Morris (presenter)
English radio broadcaster From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Darryl Morris (born 7 September 1990) is an English radio broadcaster and documentary maker. He currently hosts the weekend late show on national speech radio station Times Radio.[1]
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Morris was raised in Horwich and attended Rivington and Blackrod High School.[2]
Before joining Times Radio, he presented the Early Breakfast show on sister station Talkradio.[3]
Morris started out on school radio, and was a youth presenter on the 4 episodes of BBC World Service series Generation Next. He had brief stints at Manchester-based radio station Key 103 and digital station The Hits Radio, as well as working for BBC Radio Manchester as a researcher.[4]
In 2008, Morris appeared in Chicago Town Pizza television adverts.[4]
In 2009, he joined Global Radio to work across the now rebranded Capital Manchester, formerly Galaxy Manchester, and XFM Manchester.[5]
On 24 June 2012 he returned to Bauer Radio to host the simulcast The Late Show (Key 103, Rock FM and The Hits Radio).[6]
He hosted Darryl Morris in the Morning, the breakfast show on The Hits and Bauer City 3 from 2013[7] until August 2015. He also hosted a Saturday talk show on Liverpool's Radio City Talk.[5]
In 2015, Darryl Morris in the Morning moved for a short run on Rock FM,[8] before Morris become presenter of Bauer Media Group's simulcast Evening Show in July 2016, broadcasting on 9 different radio stations including Key 103, Radio City and Metro Radio.[9]
Morris was one of the first journalists on the scene of the Manchester Arena bombing, covering the event, its aftermath and writing extensively about its impact.[10][11][12][13]
In 2019, Morris left music radio and moved into speech radio, joining national speech station Talkradio to host the overnight show before later moving to Early Breakfast and the weekend Evening Show.[14]
In 2021, he produced and presented a documentary about manipulative web design, Dark Patterns, for BBC World Service.[15]
In February 2023, Morris investigated the events surrounding the disappearance of Nicola Bulley, focusing on the role of TikTok sleuths and "grief junkies" who flocked to the scene.[16][17]
In 2024, he presented a documentary about a man who claims to be God, God Next Door, for BBC Radio 4.[18] Morris spent several years with the man and with the group of people who follow him.[19][20]
Morris has talked extensively about his childhood diagnosis of ADHD and the impact it has on his life and work.[21] In 2024, he hosted an episode of The Story Podcast about the speculation surrounding over-diagnosis of ADHD.
He has had bylines in The Times,[16] Grazia,[22] and HuffPost[23] and was a regular columnist for the Lancashire Evening Post.[24] He occasionally contributes on BBC News, Sky News[13] and Good Morning Britain,[25] Jeremy Vine on Channel 5.[26]
Morris lives in Manchester and London and is a season-ticket holder for Bolton Wanderers Football Club.[27]
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