James O'Brien (broadcaster)

Journalist

Birthday January 13, 1972

Birth Sign Capricorn

Age 52 years old

#13349 Most Popular

1972

James Edward O'Brien (born 1972)

is a British radio presenter, podcaster, author, and former tabloid journalist and television presenter.

2000

From 2000 to 2002, O'Brien was a panellist on the Channel 5 programme The Wright Stuff.

2001

In early 2001, he presented A Knight with O'Brien, a talk show on Anglia Television.

With his wife, Lucy O'Brien (née McDonald), he fronted Channel 5's 2001 general election talk show 5 Talk, securing a review from Clive James, who wrote: "James, in particular, is a pink-shirted walking encyclopedia of political savvy".

2002

O'Brien first appeared on LBC during 2002 as a holiday cover presenter.

2003

His own weekly programme began in January 2003 and he became a full-time presenter in 2004.

Regular features of his show include the "Mystery Hour," in which listeners phone in with various things that puzzle them and other callers attempt to give a solution.

2004

Since 2004, he has been a presenter for talk station LBC, on weekdays between 10am and 1pm, hosting a phone-in discussion of current affairs, views and real-life experiences.

2009

O'Brien made national headlines in April 2009 when footballer Frank Lampard phoned his show to object to tabloid stories about his private life and O'Brien's discussion of them.

Lampard's former fiancée, Elen Rivas, had alleged that Frank Lampard had turned their home into a bachelor pad while she and Lampard's children were living in a rented flat.

Lampard phoned in, objecting to the assertion that he was "weak" and "scum" and said that he had fought "tooth and nail" to keep his family together.

Public comments on Lampard's reaction praised Lampard's "brave" and "articulate" handling of the situation.

2010

The exchange later earned O'Brien, who defended his conduct in an equally heated exchange with Kay Burley on Sky News, a Bronze Award in the Best Interview category of the 2010 Sony Radio Academy Awards.

2013

In 2013, O'Brien clashed with Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith in an argument over the Government's work programmes.

2014

In May 2014, O'Brien interviewed UKIP leader Nigel Farage.

During the interview, O'Brien picked up on Farage's comment that he felt uncomfortable on a train at not being able to hear anyone speaking English.

Farage was also criticised by O'Brien for misinterpreting having English as a second language as being unable to speak English at all and for saying he would be concerned if a group of Romanian men moved in next door to him.

In October 2014, O'Brien breached broadcasting rules by his remarks during the Clacton by-election.

Throughout 2014 and 2015, O'Brien gave much air time and promotion to false claims of VIP sex abuse by the now discredited Exaro News website, which were based on testimony from Carl Beech, later sentenced to prison for perverting the course of justice and child sex offences, something O'Brien later expressed regret for on Twitter.

O'Brien has claimed to be politically homeless, being against the British Left such as the Labour party under Jeremy Corbyn, but enjoys support from the liberal media of British politics e.g. the New Statesman and The Guardian.

He enjoys the freedom that LBC gives him to express his views.

2015

In 2015 he wrote the book Loathe Thy Neighbour, which examined attitudes towards immigration, and was published by Elliott & Thompson.

2016

O'Brien frequently discusses Brexit with callers who voted to leave the EU in the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, often claiming Leave voters had been deceived by the pro-Brexit campaigns to vote against their own interests.

2017

In October 2017, he hosted (for a year) an interview series titled, Unfiltered with James O'Brien on Joe.i.e.

He was an occasional presenter for BBC's Newsnight.

2018

In his 2018 book How To Be Right... in a World Gone Wrong, O'Brien offers his opinions on various current affairs.

The book reached fifth position in The Sunday Times' Top 10 best sellers' list in December that year.

2019

His Spin-off podcast Full Disclosure for LBC commenced in March 2019.

O'Brien was born to a single teenage mother, whose name he knows but has no wish to meet.

He was adopted, at the age of 28 days, by Jim O'Brien, a journalist who later joined The Daily Telegraph, and his wife.

At the time of James's birth, Jim was working on the Doncaster Evening News.

He was educated at the Catholic independent Ampleforth College, from which he was expelled for smoking cannabis, and later read Philosophy & Economics at the London School of Economics.

Prior to his broadcasting career, O'Brien was an editor of the Daily Express gossip column written under the pseudonym William Hickey.

He has also written for the Daily Mail, Cosmopolitan and The Spectator.

2020

His third book, How Not to Be Wrong: The Art of Changing Your Mind, was published by W. H. Allen in 2020 and is described as a "candid account of childhood, therapy and the times he's been the one who needed a good talking to."

A family crisis saw a sceptical O'Brien try therapy; an experience which was "as though someone had lifted medicine balls off both my shoulders".

In 2023, O'Brien's fourth book How They Broke Britain was published by Penguin Books.

In the book, he "reveals the shady network of influence that has created a broken Britain of strikes, shortages and scandals".

Each chapter focuses on each "particular person complicit in the downfall", such as former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, News Corporation founder Rupert Murdoch, former UKIP leader Nigel Farage and former UK prime ministers, David Cameron, Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.