
Ex- presenter John Humphrys on being drunk during live Nixon resignation report
Ex- presenter John Humphrys on being drunk during live Nixon resignation report2 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleAmelia Shone-AdamsBBC WalesEPAJohn Humphrys presented Radio 4's Today programme for 32...
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A significant story is unfolding on the international scene. Ex- presenter John Humphrys on being drunk during live Nixon resignation report2 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleAmelia Shone-AdamsBBC WalesEPAJohn Humphrys presented Radio 4's Today programme for 32 years, as well as the TV programme MastermindFormer presenter John Humphrys has recalled being drunk live on air in the early years of his career. Humphrys told The Times he "staggered" back to the office after a "lavish" lunch in August 1974 - and then told to break the news that US president Richard Nixon was resigning. "I didn't fall off the chair, but it was painfully obvious," said Humphrys, adding: "That was the last time ever.
"Humphrys went on to present Radio 4's flagship Today programme for 32 years before retiring in 2019. Now aged 82, he has released a new podcast called The Odd Couple in which he talks about being the first journalist at the scene of the Aberfan disaster, and growing up in Cardiff. Getty ImagesFormer US President Richard Nixon live from the White House in 1974 announcing his resignation Humphrys, who joined the in 1966, said he was working for the corporation in Washington DC when he was among the first journalists to break the news of Nixon's resignation.
The Details
He told The Times he had gone for a "very, very, very lavish lunch, a couple of glasses of red in the office beforehand". "We used to have this gallon thing of burgundy, so had a couple of glasses of red wine, then go to the restaurant, have a martini or two, then a glass of wine with lunch and brandy afterwards. "Anyway, I staggered back to the office and my PA, or BA , whatever they called them in those days, said: 'Are you sober?
' and I said, 'What do you think darling? ' or something stupid. "And she said, 'You've got to get on.
They've booked a satellite. "Humphrys said he "got through it" but "only just". "She said to me the next day, my BA, 'London probably won't say anything to you, but they've just said it to me.
What Experts Say
You can't do it again'. "Humphrys said it never happened again, adding that he now "virtually drink at all". Humphrys - here with former Prime Minster Tony Blair - earned a reputation as a formidable journalist Humphrys was born in 1943 and grew up in Splott, Cardiff.
In the first episode of his new podcast, which he co-hosts with journalist Matthew Norman, Humphrys said he achieved good grades and earned a place at Cardiff High Grammar School but was "the poorest kid in my class". He was picked on by his classmates for only having one pair of trousers and being told "your trousers smell bad". "It was not a nice time, not a good time and I hated it," Humphrys told his podcast.
'I've seen horrible things, but nothing matches Aberfan'Mirrorpix via Getty ImagesRescue workers bagging and moving some of the coal spoil following the disaster Humphrys described working three part-time jobs while at school, including a morning paper round, being a messenger for a chemist and growing food in an allotment.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





