1970–1995: Early career and ITV television show Whale began his broadcasting career in 1970 following a visit to a
Topshop store on
Regent Street, London. He spoke to manager
Ralph Halpern who initially declined to hire a DJ for the store, after which he worked as an assistant stage manager at a theatre in
Oxford. Whale was soon invited back to Topshop and accepted work as one of the launch DJs of Radio Topshop, the in-house radio station. In the late 1980s Whale became influenced by American radio hosts, including the "
shock jock"
Howard Stern, and changed his style, having become tired of the "lovely phone-ins" that he had been accustomed to. Commencing on the "Friday night" of 24 September 1988 – the 1 am start time making it technically a Saturday morning – Whale's radio show at Radio Aire was simulcast with
Yorkshire Television and was titled
The James Whale Radio Show, featuring live studio guests, music and listener phone calls. The show became a ratings success, and in less than seven months it started to air nationally on
ITV. The
Conservative MP
Jerry Hayes had a regular slot on the show and
Steve Coogan also made regular appearances. By September 1989, the show attracted over one million viewers. It cost the television station £15,000 to run each hour. In January 1993 Whale began a new ITV series,
Whale On.
1995–2008: Talk Radio/Talksport He was known as a presenter who was controversial and outspoken. In 2008 at
Talksport he was suspended for urging listeners to vote for
Boris Johnson in the
London mayoral election. Whale initially tried to pursue a legal case against Talksport, before withdrawing the legal action. The media regulator said Talksport had broken the code on ensuring due impartiality, and said the breach was so serious that it had considered whether to impose a sanction on the station, which could have included a fine. He continued to broadcast on JamesWhaleRadio.co.uk. On 20 May 2008, Whale began a four-hour weekly evening phone-in on
Internet radio station Play Radio UK; however, on 2 September 2008, he said on air he was leaving Play Radio for book promotion and TV work.
2013–2016: Various projects After leaving
LBC 97.3 Whale presented shows at
BBC Radio Berkshire,
BBC Three Counties Radio,
BBC Radio WM, occasionally
BBC Radio Kent and a new online format of his hit 1989 TV show,
Whales Weekly. In September 2013 Whale launched his weekly podcast,
The James Whale Radio Show, which was produced by Rob Oldfield. The podcast ran for over 300 original episodes. On 28 July 2016 Whale entered the
Celebrity Big Brother house to compete as a housemate in
its eighteenth series. He was the sixth to be evicted, coming ninth overall.
2016–2025: talkRADIO & TalkTV Whale began covering shows on
talkRADIO in October 2016 and he started presenting the Monday to Thursday evening show between 7pm and 10pm from 7 November 2016. On 3 August 2018 Whale was suspended by talkRADIO, pending a full investigation, after an interview with the author and journalist
Nichi Hodgson, who had been sexually assaulted. In a statement, TalkRadio said Whale's interview with Hodgson "completely lacked sensitivity" and was conducted "in a manner that did not reflect the values of the station". In a video clip from the interview, which was later deleted, Whale was seen shaking his head and laughing when the interviewee described what had happened to her. Whale returned to work at the station ten days later on 13 August. He presented
James Whale Unleashed on TalkTV and TalkRadio. ==Personal life and death==