Barbara Sturgeon | |
---|---|
Station(s) | BBC Radio Kent (1983-2004) |
Station(s) | BBC Radio 2 (1989-1990s) |
Style | Presenter |
Country | United Kingdom |
Barbara Sturgeon is a British radio presenter and winner of two Sony Radio Awards for a show she presented on BBC Radio Kent during the 1980s. Sturgeon later presented an early Sunday morning programme for BBC Radio 2 from 1989, but returned to Radio Kent during the early 1990s, where she presented a lunchtime current affairs show until leaving the station in 2004.
Her broadcasting career began in 1983 when she joined BBC Radio Medway (later BBC Radio Kent) presented reports for the BBC from Northern Ireland during the height of the Troubles, and a Teabreak feature.[1] She went on from this to front the Drivetime show for BBC Radio Kent, as well as a Sunday request show,[1] before presenting her own lunchtime current affairs show, The Barbara Sturgeon Show.[2] The programme covered a broad range of topics, from political and social issues to more light-hearted subjects, as well as human interest stories. Among topics covered on the show were a debate on the Zeebrugge Inquiry, held following the 1987 Zeebrugge ferry disaster. Sturgeon also hosted election coverage for the station.[1]
The lunchtime show garnered Sturgeon the Sony Local Radio Personality of the Year Award in both 1987 and 1988. She was again nominated for the Award in 1989 for a programme which featured live coverage a human birth.[2][3] Following the success of her lunchtime show, she later presented BBC Radio Kent's News and Current Affairs Breakfast Show, before moving to BBC Radio 2 in 1989,[3] where she spent two years presenting an early breakfast show on Sunday mornings.
Sturgeon subsequently returned to BBC Radio Kent in the 1990s to present another lunchtime show which which had a similar format to her original programme. One of the topics covered on the show was that of animal welfare, and in 1998 she was awarded the RSPCA Local Media Award for this.[2] In 2004 following twenty years with the BBC, Sturgeon took the decision to leave BBC Radio Kent in order to pursue other projects both inside and outside the media.[1][4]