BBC Radio 1 In 1976 he joined the BBC's pop network,
Radio 1, initially hosting a Saturday morning show from 10 to midday, but sitting in for many other DJs, and eventually graduating to a weekday late afternoon/early evening show in the spring of 1978 from 4:30 to 7:00p.m. He kept his profile high through regular appearances presenting
Top of the Pops, and championed a number of acts who went on to achieve huge commercial success, including
The Police and
Gary Numan. After his 29 May 1980 radio show, Jensen left the BBC to work for the
Turner Broadcasting System WTBS cable superstation in
Atlanta, Georgia, where he was host of the 10:00p.m. news. On 12 October 1981, Jensen returned to BBC Radio 1 with a new weekday evening show from 810p.m. The show was later extended to run from 710p.m. Soon afterwards he dropped the "Kid" name, although he remained popularly known by it for many years after and would reinstate it in the late-1990s. His mid-evening show was dominated by indie-rock, but also featured interviews with mainstream acts such as
Duran Duran, and was the first show to champion
Frankie Goes to Hollywood, before their commercial success. He remained a regular
Top of the Pops presenter. He also wrote a pop column for the
Daily Mirror.
Capital Radio In 1984, Jensen left Radio 1 and joined London's
Capital FM, presenting the weekday mid-morning show (replacing
Michael Aspel); moving to weekday drivetime in 1987. In addition to his weekday shows he also presented the weekly
The Network Chart Show, the UK's first syndicated commercial radio show which originally went out every Sunday between 5p.m. and 7p.m., competing directly with Radio 1's
Top 40 show. While presenting the
Network Chart, Jensen became
ITV's unofficial "face" of pop music, presenting pop shows such as
The Roxy, an attempt to compete with
Top of the Pops. He continued to comment regularly on pop-related stories in
ITN and
Sky News bulletins for some time after he left the
Network Chart in 1993, when he was replaced by
Neil Fox. Jensen continued to present the weekday drivetime show on Capital FM until 1998. He also presented various children's programmes including
Worldwise and
Popquest.
Recent years In 1998, Jensen joined rival London FM station,
Heart 106.2, presenting the weekday drivetime show from 4pm to 7pm. He also presented a Sunday afternoon CD chart show called Kid Jensen's CD Countdown which was produced by
Blue Revolution and networked on
Birmingham's
100.7 Heart FM and various other stations. In 2002, Jensen returned to Capital and was heard on its oldies service
Capital Gold. First presenting the Monday–Thursday late night show from 10p.m.1a.m., before taking over the weekday mid-morning slot in February 2003, then the breakfast show, (co-hosted with Erika North). Jensen later moved to the late morning slot 10a.m.1p.m. Jensen teamed up with Capital Radio Producer Craig Kingham to present the Saturday morning show. Jensen left Gold in December 2010. In September 2008, Jensen hosted the evening show of
Planet Rock (7-11p.m.) as a stand-in for
Nicky Horne. He also hosted Planet Rock's Sunday Morning show, "Another Dimension", and co-hosted with
Rick Wakeman on Saturday mornings until December 2010 and briefly hosted the Saturday morning 10a.m.1p.m. show on his own, until he left the station in April 2011. Jensen joined
Smooth Radio in April 2011 to present an afternoon show. In April 2012, he took over the Smooth Drive Home slot (Mondays to Friday, 4p.m. – 8p.m.) from
Carlos. Jensen also hosted a two-hour retro chart show on Smooth Radio on Sunday evenings. Smooth was acquired by Global Radio in 2013. Following a studio and business move to Global headquarters in Leicester Square, Jensen was dropped from the schedules on 19 December 2013. In February 2021, he joined
Jazz FM for a six week run of Sunday evening programmes named ''David Jensen's Jazz'' in partnership with
Parkinson's UK. Also that month, he began a weekly show on the newly launched
Boom Radio, on Friday nights called ''Kid Jensen's 70s
. In February 2022, David Jensen's Jazz'' returned to Jazz FM for a second series and a third in April 2023. ==Personal life==