Vine's career at the BBC included reading the news on the radio in
Northern Ireland and working as a researcher on the
BBC1 series
Heart of the Matter. In 1989, he became a regular reporter on the
BBC Radio 4 programme
Today, filing reports from across Europe. While working for
Today, he published two comic novels set amidst the modern
Church of England, including
Forget Heaven, Just Kiss Me (1992) and
The Whole World in My Hands (1993). Vine now regards them as
juvenilia. In the mid-1990s, Vine became familiar to BBC TV viewers as a political reporter, which included reporting on the ascent of
New Labour under
Tony Blair. Vine later provided irreverent reports on the
1997 General Election. Following the 1997 election, Vine became the Africa Correspondent based in
Johannesburg, travelling across Africa. Reporting assignments took him to the war front to report on the
Eritrean–Ethiopian War, the
Angolan Civil War, the violence in
Lesotho after
South African troops went in and hoisted a South African flag over the Royal Palace, following leadership disputes. He also travelled to
Algiers and
Kenya, to report during political elections. Vine was successful in gaining interviews with key leaders in various African nations, including the President of
Zimbabwe,
Robert Mugabe, and the leader of the Islamist regime in
Khartoum,
Sudan. Other areas of Africa from which he has reported include
Mali,
Zambia,
Sierra Leone and the
Niger Delta (to report on the
Nigerian villagers' unrest over the work of the oil companies). In April 1999, Vine presented an exclusive report on
South African police brutality for
BBC Two's
Newsnight. The film won the Silver Nymph at the
Monte Carlo Television Festival and resulted in the suspension of 22 police officers. In July 1999, the BBC announced that Vine was joining
Newsnight full-time as a co-presenter, having stood in for
Jeremy Paxman over the two previous summers. Paxman was reported to have called Vine "
Mini-Me", a reference to the diminutive associate of
Dr. Evil in the
Austin Powers film series. Vine was one of the original presenters of
Broadcasting House on BBC Radio 4 and presented
The Politics Show on
BBC One from its launch in 2003 until
Jon Sopel took over in 2005. In May 2006, Vine was announced as
Peter Snow's replacement for presenting the BBC election graphics, including the famous
Swingometer. His performance on the night of the council elections in England and Wales on 30 April 2008 was widely criticised. From 2007 until 2009, Vine co-presented the
Teaching Awards with
Kate Thornton (2007),
Myleene Klass (2008) and
Christine Lampard (2009). Between 2007 and 2010, Vine was the presenter of the BBC's flagship and the world's oldest current affairs programme,
Panorama, which coincided with the show's move back to a Monday peak-time slot. From 2008 to 2018, Vine presented
Points of View, taking over from Sir
Terry Wogan. On 6 October 2008, he started hosting the former BBC Two quiz show
Eggheads while the spin-off show,
Are You an Egghead?, was presented by the regular host,
Dermot Murnaghan. Once the spin-off show had finished, Vine continued to host the second half of each series, with Murnaghan hosting the first half. In Series 16, it was announced that Vine had become the sole presenter. As of 2014, Vine also hosted the spin-off series
Revenge of the Egghead. The series ran for a 6-week period, between 24 February and 4 April 2014. On 12 March 2021, it was announced that after 18 years at the BBC, the programme would be moving to
Channel 5, and Vine was to continue as host of the show. From 2016 to 2017, Vine co-presented
Crimewatch with
Tina Daheley. In September 2018, Vine replaced
Matthew Wright as the presenter of
Channel 5's weekday morning current affairs show, formerly called
The Wright Stuff. The show's name has now changed to
Jeremy Vine. Vine said he would continue to present his Radio 2 weekday lunchtime programme. In March 2021, it was announced that
Eggheads would be joining his morning current affairs/phone-in show as a programme broadcast on Channel 5, after the BBC put the quiz on hiatus.
BBC Radio 2 On 6 January 2003, after several stints as a stand-in for
Jimmy Young on
BBC Radio 2, Vine took over the weekday lunchtime show on a regular basis. The show consists of a mix of news-based discussions, including views from listeners, interspersed with popular music. After Vine took over the hosting duties, the show was revamped. While the regular Thursday food slot was dropped, the Monday health and Friday legal advice slots were retooled. Monday's
The Health and Wellbeing Hour included either general practitioner
Sarah Jarvis or Rabbi
Julia Neuberger, while Friday's
Your Money and Your Life, involves a variety of contributors, most frequently
Martin Lewis. Since 2003, Friday's shows have frequently included a link-up to
Rhondda gardener
Terry Walton. For four years, until October 2006, Lucy Berry served as the show's in-house poet.
Strictly Come Dancing On 10 August 2015, Vine was the first celebrity to be announced as taking part in the
thirteenth series of the popular
BBC One competition
Strictly Come Dancing. Vine was partnered with professional,
Karen Clifton. On the fourth week of the contest, after Vine danced a
jive to
Bobby Darin’s "
Splish Splash",
Bruno Tonioli described him as a "Peculiar, off-the-wall artist like Tracey Emin", and
Craig Revel Horwood compared him to "a stork that had been struck by lightning." In week eight of the show he was in the dance-off, alongside
Jamelia, and voted out of the show; finishing in ninth place. He also took part in the 2017 Christmas special with the same partner. == Controversies ==