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Tony Blackburn quips: I’ll get a sex change if BBC women are paid more than me!

The veteran DJ uttered the first words on Radio 1 in 1967.

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Tony Blackburn and Nick Grimshaw in the Radio 1 Breakfast studio (Mark Allan/BBC Radio 1)

DJ Tony Blackburn has said he has been left “baffled” by the gender pay gap – as he prepares to help Radio 1 turn 50.

The veteran broadcaster, 74, who is hosting a special show with breakfast DJ Nick Grimshaw, uttered the first words on Radio 1 in 1967.

He told the Press Association: “I can never understand … whether it’s in broadcasting or anywhere else … why it is … if somebody is doing the same job, whether they’re male or female, they should be getting exactly the same money.

“It’s ridiculous, the fact that a woman doing the same job as a man isn’t getting paid the same. I don’t understand that at all.”

Tony Blackburn in 1968 (PA)

And he joked: “If they do actually make it so that the women get tremendously much more than I’m getting, I shall have a sex change!”

He added: “They are addressing that problem. I’m surprised in any organisation that it’s still going on. I’ve never been able to understand that. Why it is, it baffles me. It doesn’t make any sense whatsoever.”

His comments come after it was revealed two-thirds of BBC stars earning more than £150,000 are male, with Radio 2 DJ Chris Evans the top-paid on between £2.2 million and £2.25 million.

Blackburn said: “I’m in favour of women ruling the world anyway. Seriously, I think we wouldn’t have all these problems in the world, all these macho men firing rockets everywhere. I think women are far more sensible.

Tony Blackburn (PA)
Tony Blackburn was the first DJ on Radio 1 (PA)

He defended fellow Radio 2 broadcaster Evans’s pay packet, joking: “I was very envious” but “he gets a very big audience. It’s a lot of money but I’m sure he’s worth every penny.”

Grimshaw, the current Radio 1 breakfast show host, and Blackburn will be celebrating Radio 1’s birthday on Saturday, 50 years to the day since the station launched.

The station will launch Radio 1 Vintage, a three-day digital radio station featuring 50 one-hour themed nostalgic shows made from Radio 1’s archive material from DJs across its history.

Blackburn admitted that DJs and radio stations do not hold the power they once did.

Millionaire presenter Chris Evans (Nick Ansell/PA)
Millionaire presenter Chris Evans (Nick Ansell/PA)

“The Radio 1 audience now is really getting their things from social media more, with Spotify and YouTube….

“If you gave a youngster a (physical) radio now they probably wouldn’t know what it is because they’re listening (to the radio) either on their smartphones or on the television.”

But people who get their music from streaming services instead of the radio are “missing out on the personalities”, he said.

Nick Grimshaw (Ian West/PA)

“If you just want the music fine, but if I listen in I want to hear somebody talking to me, making me laugh.”

Looking back to his first broadcast, he said: “I remember it like it was yesterday. It’s not something you forget too easily because it was very special.

“I came in at about 6 o’clock in the morning and we opened up the station at 7 o’clock.”

Blackburn returned to the BBC airwaves last year, 10 months after being sacked over evidence he gave to the Jimmy Savile inquiry.

The DJ had threatened to sue the BBC and claimed he had been made a “scapegoat” after being taken off air but his return to the corporation was announced in October 2016.

“We’ve moved and agreed to move on. But I’m very glad to be back,” he said.

:: BBC Radio 1 will celebrate its 50th anniversary on Saturday.

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