'' broadcast on 15 January 2016 at the Nexus Methodist Church, Bath, during the church's 200th anniversary year Dimbleby began his career at the BBC in
Bristol in 1969. In 1970 he joined
The World at One as a reporter, where he also presented
The World This Weekend. In 1972 he joined ITV's flagship current affairs programme
This Week and over the following six years reported on crises in many parts of the world. His coverage of the 1973 Ethiopian famine,
The Unknown Famine, was followed by TV and radio appeals which raised a record sum nationally and internationally. His report, for which he won the SFTA Richard Dimbleby Award, was used by the incoming regime to justify the overthrow of the Ethiopian Emperor
Haile Selassie. In 1978 he wrote and presented the ITV series
Jonathan Dimbleby in South America. In 1979 he joined
Yorkshire Television, where he wrote and presented three ITV network series:
Jonathan Dimbleby In Search of the American Dream (1976),
The Bomb (1979),
The Eagle and The Bear (1980) and
The Cold War Game (1981). He also presented the ITV documentary series
First Tuesday. In 1985 he joined
TV-am as presenter of
Jonathan Dimbleby on Sunday. In 1986 he returned to ITV as presenter of
This Week. In 1988 he joined the BBC to present the new flagship political programme
On the Record (1988–1993). He wrote, presented and co-produced two documentary series:
The Last Governor (BBC1, 1997) about the final five years of British rule in
Hong Kong, and
Charles: The Private Man, the Public Role (ITV, 1994), in which (the then)
Prince Charles spoke about his first marriage and his relationship with
Camilla Parker Bowles, now his wife and queen consort of the United Kingdom. From 1994 to 2006 he presented ITV's political programme,
Jonathan Dimbleby. He anchored ITV's general election coverage in 1997, 2001 and 2005. He wrote and presented
Russia with Jonathan Dimbleby (BBC2, 2008),
An African Journey with Jonathan Dimbleby (2010), and
A South American Journey with Jonathan Dimbleby (2011). In 2013 he wrote and presented ''Churchill's Desert War
(BBC2) based on his book, Destiny in The Desert
. In 2015 he wrote and presented the two-part series The BBC At War'' (BBC2). From 1987 to June 2019 he presented
Any Questions? on
BBC Radio 4. He presented
Any Answers? from 1989 to 2012. From 2016 to 2019, he was the main presenter of the BBC World Service monthly series
World Questions. In April 2020, Dimbleby wrote and presented the ITV documentary
Return to Belsen with Jonathan Dimbleby about the
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. In 2022, following the death of Queen
Elizabeth II, Dimbleby wrote and presented the documentary
Charles, the Monarch and the Man, which aired on ITV on 13 September 2022. Dimbleby has been described in the media as "confidant of King Charles". ==Other work==