David Jensen
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David "Kid" Jensen (*July 4, 1950 in Victoria, British Columbia) is a Canadian-born British radio DJ.
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[edit] Early career
After beginning his career in his home country at the age of sixteen, joined Radio Luxembourg at the age of eighteen in 1968. His late-night shows concentrated on what was then referred to as "progressive" music and attracted many fans, including future British Prime Minister Tony Blair.By 1974 Jensen was becoming a TV personality in Britain, hosting pop shows on ITV, and in the mid-1970s he worked for the then-new Radio Trent (now Trent FM) in Nottingham, one of the first legal, land-based commercial stations in the UK.
[edit] Radio 1
In 1976 he joined the BBC's pop network, Radio 1, initially hosting a Saturday morning show from 10am-Midday, but sitting in for many other DJs, and eventually graduating to a weekday late afternoon / early evening show in the spring of 1978 from 4.30-7pm. He kept his profile high through regular appearances presenting Top of the Pops, and championed many acts who went on to achieve huge commercial success, notably The Police and Gary Numan. He was effectively a halfway house between the specialist music-orientated DJs such as John Peel and the daytime "personality jocks" such as Dave Lee Travis.
In September 1980, Jensen left Radio 1 to work for the then-new CNN in Atlanta, but he returned a year later, presenting the weekday evening show from 8-10pm (later extended to run from 7-10 pm). Soon afterwards he dropped the "Kid" name, although he would still be popularly known by it for many years to come. His mid-evening show was dominated by indie-rock, but which also featured interviews with mainstream acts such as Duran Duran, and was the first show to champion Frankie Goes To Hollywood, long before their commercial success. He remained a regular Top of the Pops presenter and struck up a legendary partnership with John Peel.
[edit] Capital Radio
In 1984, Jensen quit Radio 1 & joined London's Capital Radio, for whom he presented a weekday mid-morning show, then moving to weekday drivetime - as it was now called - in 1987.
In addition to his weekday shows he also presented the weekly Network Chart, the UK's first syndicated commercial radio show which went out every Sunday between 5 and 7 pm, directly opposite the BBC Radio 1 Top 40 show. Its style and ethos anticipated a number of regulatory changes between 1988 and the early 1990s, which pushed commercial radio away from the more localised and less pop-dominated form it took in its early years, towards the homogenised, purely pop-driven form it now takes where stations are centrally owned and often almost indistinguishable from each other. Its anticipation of commercial radio's future direction is far more important than the chart it actually broadcast, which never equalled the definitive status of the official chart (then compiled by Gallup) used by Radio 1, even though it was considerably more up-to-date until the compilation of the official chart was sped up in 1987.
While presenting the Network Chart David Jensen became ITV's unofficial "face" of pop music, presenting pop shows such as the children's series "Razzmatazz" and also "The Roxy", an ill-fated attempt to compete with Top of the Pops. He would continue to regularly comment on pop-related stories in ITN news bulletins for some time after he left the Network Chart in 1993, when he was replaced by Neil Fox (the show has since evolved into hit40uk). He continued to present the weekday drivetime show on what was now called Capital FM until 1998.
He also presented various children's programmes including Worldwise & Popquest.
[edit] Recent Years
In 1998 Jensen joined rival London FM station, Heart 106.2, presenting the weekday drivetime show from 4-7pm. He also presented a Saturday afternoon show which was networked on Birmingham's 100.7 Heart FM. In 2002 he returned to Capital and since then has been heard on its oldies service Capital Gold, firstly presenting the Monday - Thursday late night show from 10pm - 1am, before taking over his current weekday mid-morning slot in February 2003, which goes out from 10am-1pm. In addition to that, he also presents a Saturday Morning show from 9am-12midday. Capital Gold broadcasts on mediumwave in London and other areas, but also on digital satellite television.