Celebrity
Pete Price looks back at some unforgettable phone in moments as the show comes to an end
5 years ago
Love him or hate him, and he really doesnât mind which it is, the end of Pete Priceâs radio phone-in show with the closure of Radio City Talk is definitely the end of an era.
For more than 40 years heâs been on our airwaves, spanning generations of listeners, of âpranks, cranks and banned listsâ and of genuinely ground-breaking radio.
Heâs listened, heâs argued, and heâs divided opinions.
âIâm Marmite, I know that,â says Pete. âBut whatever people say about me I embrace it, and when you do then they usually end up thinking, actually heâs alright isnât he?Â
âPeople didnât always agree with me, a lot of the time they didnât, but if I was having a go at somebody it wasnât to shock people, it was just how I honestly felt. I didnât want to pretend, I couldnât because in Liverpool they would have seen right through that and Iâd never have lasted.Â
âThey loved trying to wind me up and telling me to f*** off, calling me a lizard and everything else, but more than anything I think they loved the passion I had for the show because they could tell it was real.â
Pete, now 74, began his radio career to keep his profile up in the city while he toured the country as a stand-up comedian. âNever in a trillion years did I think it would become my job,â he admits.
We will get there Liverpool â¤ď¸ pic.twitter.com/L0DhrLMruY
â The Guide Liverpool (@TheGuideLpool) May 10, 2020
After starting reviewing new record releases on Radio Merseyside, on a half-hour show called Never Mind the Price, he moved to join City more than four decades ago.
When his idea to review soaps on a Saturday morning took off, he was offered his first phone-in chat show. Disillusioned after having a TV series cancelled, and wanting to cut down on the 70,000 miles a year he was travelling as a comedian, he took it.
Working first from Stanley Street and then from the Radio City Tower when the station relocated in 2000, heâs proudly become a late-night fixture, breaking stories that have made headlines around the world.
Callers have included Paul McCartney and Peter Kay, heâs match-made 10 weddings (and gone to all of them) and heâs created a family of listeners from 10 to 100 years old. Like all families, sometimes they fall out, but theyâre loyal too.
âLike Pat the soap lady,â says Pete. âShe came on one day and talked about soaps and I said, âyou should do this againâ. She rang in every week for 28 years.â
Over the years, heâs worked alongside many fellow presenters and producers, including The Guide Liverpoolâs Jay Hynd.
Jay was Peteâs producer from 2002 to 2009, âand they were some of the best times of my 40 years,â he says.
So, as his show comes to an end, The Guide Liverpool asked Pete to look back over some career milestones âŚ
Breaking the news of pop legend Michael Jacksonâs death
âWe went international by being the first radio show to break the news that Michael Jackson had died. Jay spotted the first story from America while we were on air and all of a sudden the two of us were both on the phone between calls just tracking down everyone we could. I was ringing Sharon Osborne and Uri Geller, and Sharon had only just been told so she came straight on air. The reaction we got was unbelievable and our content was picked up by lots of news outlets including Sky.â
We saved the life of 12-year-old Michael
âWe had a young boy on air who was threatening to take his own life. I left the show with Jay, they played music while I was out of the studio, I phoned the police and I found him and took him to the Royal. The story, which they headlined Last Night a DJ Saved My Life, went right around the world.â
We had a million pranks and cranks, and Jay often lifted the banned list to sneak them on to the show
We spent three months inside Walton Prison recording an exclusive documentary
The amount of people who listened to me in prison was phenomenal so when we went into Walton it felt like everybody knew me. I walked out onto the biggest wing, and hundreds of them were cheering âPriceyâ, then one spat on me from upstairs. You canât imagine the fear I felt inside, but I just looked up and said âdâyou know what gents, heâs only upset because I wonât be his b***h!â â they all applauded and he came down and shook my hand.â
We sadly lost a listener live on airÂ
One of the saddest moments was when we lost Terry, one of our regular callers, while he was on the show. He was having a real humdinger argument with two women and I heard his line go dead, which I knew he wouldnât normally do. I rang the police and a taxi driver phoned in who knew where Terry lived, so he took me to his house, we kicked the front door in and found him dead.
We helped police with appeals after James Bulger, Rhys Jones and Anthony Walker were killed
âWhen James was killed, we were doing five hours a night because the whole city was grieving. Weâd have 200 calls at the end still waiting to talk, every night, it was such a terrible time. But we found people whoâd seen James being walked away, so we were really able to help with the case. I became friends with Denise and I went on marches with her, thatâs how much it took over my life.â
The night Rhys Jones was killed Merseyside Police turned to Pete & Jay for help in getting information about his tragic death, an appeal was launched live on air and the city came together to help find the killer.
Peter Kay rang in as a listener as he was leaving the Echo Arena after his show
âJay said to me âPeter Kayâs on the phoneâ and I wanted to say âyeah, Peter Kay, my a**e!â but it turned out he liked phone-ins, he got lots of ideas from them, and he used to listen to my show. He rang in a couple of times over the years including once when had Sally Lindsay with him and he included it on one of his DVDs.â
Pete won’t be returning to hie Radio City Talk phone-in after announcing the news that his show was coming to end on Twitter. The good news is that you can get your pricey fix right here on The Guide Liverpool as he brings you his weekly look at what’s happening on the Wirral.