Early career In Whiley's final year of her degree, still unsure of what she wanted to do, a conversation with a lecturer led to a job with
BBC Radio Sussex on a show called
Turn It Up. It allowed anyone to get on the radio and required Whiley to attend shows and interview the musicians. In July 2009, Whiley published her autobiography,
My World in Motion, on CD through
Random House Audiobooks.
The Jo Whiley Show on BBC Radio 1 From February 1997, Whiley had a weekday lunchtime show, called
The Jo Whiley Show and later
The Lunchtime Social. This included elements of the evening show, such as tour dates and occasional live 'sessions' at
Maida Vale Studios while working within the restrictions of Radio 1's daytime schedule. When
Simon Mayo left
BBC Radio 1 for
BBC Radio 5 Live and
BBC Radio 2 in February 2001, Whiley's show was moved to a mid-morning slot. In July 2008,
The Jo Whiley Show was fined £75,000 for misleading listeners for an incident involving a member of BBC staff posing as a member of the public taking part in a competition. The BBC claim Whiley herself was unaware of the deception at the time of its broadcast. Jo Whiley's weekday show ended broadcasting in September 2009 as part of a major shake-up of Radio 1's weekday schedule. The shake-up saw
Greg James move to the afternoon slot (was occupied by
Edith Bowman) and
Fearne Cotton move to Whiley's slot. Her final weekday programme took place on 18 September 2009. Following weekdays, the Jo Whiley Show was moved to weekends between 1pm to 4pm. As with her former weekday show, it still featured Live Lounge performances from visiting artists, as well as three new features: Jo's Road Trip, Top of the Shops, and SpellStar. Her last show on
BBC Radio 1 was on 27 March 2011.
BBC Radio 2 in 2010 Since August 2009, Whiley has been an occasional stand-in presenter for
Claudia Winkleman on
BBC Radio 2. She was first heard on the network on Friday 21 August and made subsequent appearances on 2 October, 6 November, 27 November and 18 December 2009. In March 2010, it was announced that Whiley and former
BBC Radio 1 presenter
Steve Lamacq would present a one-off Evening Session (the first in 13 years) on Good Friday (2 April) for
BBC Radio 6 Music. Presented another Evening Session on 28 January 2011. After being an occasional stand-in presenter on
BBC Radio 2, Whiley began presenting
In Concert on Thursday evenings in April 2010. On 1 February 2011, it was announced that Whiley would be leaving
BBC Radio 1 after 17 years of broadcasting to join
BBC Radio 2, where she would present an evening show from Mondays to Thursdays starting on 4 April 2011, replacing
The Radcliffe and Maconie Show. Radcliffe and Maconie would, in turn, move to
BBC Radio 6 Music while Whiley's Radio 1 show would be taken over by
Huw Stephens. Since 2011, she has co-hosted
Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park. In March 2012, the BBC announced that as part of the broadcaster's celebration of the 20th anniversary of
Britpop, Whiley and Lamacq would present a week of
Evening Sessions on Radio 2 from 7 April. In January 2018, it was announced that Whiley would join daytime on a drivetime show with
Simon Mayo. This is the first time a woman had co-presented a Radio 2 daytime show in 20 years. On 22 October that year, the station announced that Mayo would be leaving Radio 2 after a backlash against the change, with Whiley moving back to an evening slot. Since as early as 2021 a regular feature on Whiley's Radio 2 show has been the
Sofa Session, in which a visiting artist performs Live on air (similar to Live Lounge, with both formats typically including an exclusive cover song arranged especially for the occasion). A select few have been guests for both Live Lounge and Sofa Session:
Foo Fighters,
Coldplay,
Crowded House,
James,
The Flaming Lips,
Arcade Fire,
Bastille,
Fontaines D.C. and
Kate Nash.
Stornoway were the last to join this list, during a broadcast from
Maida Vale Studios on 15 April 2026 in which they debuted an arrangement of
Sea of Love (their 2010 Live Lounge appearance having featured an exclusive arrangement of
Wiley's "Wearing My Rolex" — retitled "Wearing My Casio" and reworded to reference Whiley herself).
Television career Whiley presents televised coverage of major music festivals, such as the
Glastonbury Festival. She also narrated the
BBC Three series
Little Angels. In October 2007, she became a judge on the
T4 (Channel 4) show
Orange unsignedAct which searches for a band trying to get a record deal. Whiley also hosted a music TV show on music channel
TMF. From late 1998, Whiley hosted her own music discussion show on Channel 4, called
The Jo Whiley Show, which ran for four series until late 2001. On 15 March 2010, Whiley presented an edition of the
Panorama documentary strand titled
Are the Net Police Coming for You? in which she looked at the
Digital Economy Bill, a proposed new law targeting people who
download music illegally from the Internet. In 2014, Whiley was a contestant on the Children in Need special of
Swashbuckle with her daughter Coco. In July 2021, Whiley was a co-presenter for the BBC's coverage of the
Hampton Court Garden Festival. In 2022,
The Killers' singer,
Brandon Flowers, dedicated a performance of their song Pressure Machine to her saying "She's always sorta championed us ... she's said some wonderful things about this song and she's requested it tonight" ==Personal life==