Jeremy Vine

Quick Facts

Full Name: Jeremy Vine
Born Date: 17 May, 1965
Age: 58 years
Horoscope: Taurus
Lucky Number: 7
Lucky Stone: Emerald
Lucky Color: Green
Best Match for Marriage: Virgo, Cancer, Capricorn
Gender: Male
Profession: Journalist
Country: London
Height: 5 feet 3 inches (1.60m)
Marital Status: married
Wife Rachel Schofield
Divorce Janelle Muntz
Net Worth $1Million-$5Million
Salary $903K – $969K
Eye Color blue
Hair Color blonde
Birth Place Epsom, Surrey
Nationality British
Education Durham University
Father Guy Vine
Mother Diana Vine
Siblings One sister Sonya and one brother Tim
Kids two daughters Martha and Anne
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Twitter Twitter
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Wiki Wiki

Jeremy Vine is a well-known television journalist who also hosts his own radio variety shows. Jeremy Vine is well-known as the host of his own BBC Radio 2 show, which features news, commentary, interviews with live guests, and popular music. Similarly, he is well-known for his direct interview style and exclusive reporting from war-torn Africa.

How much is the net worth of Jeremy Vine?

Jeremy Vine has amassed a sizable fortune as a result of his professional activities. He, on the other hand, has an estimated income as a journalist. As a result, his net worth is estimated to be between $1 million and $5 million. Similarly, his annual salary is in the region of £700,000 – £749,999 ($903K – $969K).

Jeremy Vine
Caption: Jeremy Vine (source: Evening Standard)

Childhood and Adolescence of Jeremy Vine

Jeremy Vine is 58 years old in 2023. He was born on May 17, 1965, in Epsom, Surrey, England. He was born to Guy Vine (father) and Diana Vine (mother). His father was a Civil Engineering lecturer at Surrey College of Technology in the North East, and his mother was a housewife who also worked as a doctor’s receptionist.

Likewise, he grew up with a sister named Sonya and a younger brother named Tim Vine, who is also a comedian. Vine tragically lost his father in 2018. Similarly, he is of British nationality. Although his ethnicity information is still being reviewed.

Education Background

In terms of Vine’s educational background, he attended Lynton Preparatory School in Ewell, Aberdour School in Burgh Heath, and Epsom College. He played drums in a band called The Flared Generation, which also included his brother Tim; Smash Hits magazine described them as the country’s most unfashionable punk band.

In contrast, he earned a 2:2 undergraduate degree in English from Durham University (Hatfield College). He was a member of The Durham Revue, a sketch comedy band.

Vine obtained a work permit after graduating from university and moved to the United States to look for work in Wyoming at the age of 21. Vine also completed a journalism training course with the Coventry Evening Telegraph after a brief stint on Metro Radio.

Jeremy Vine’s Professional Career

After graduating in 1986, he began his career at the BBC, reading the radio news in Northern Ireland and working as a reporter on the BBC1 show Heart of the Matter. In 1989, he was a regular correspondent on Today’s BBC Radio 4 show, filing stories from all over Europe.

While working for Today, he published two comic novels set in the modern Church of England, Forget Heaven, Just Kiss Me (1992) and The Whole World in My Hands (1993). Vine now considers the novels to be childish because they were a failure.

Vine became known to BBC TV audiences as a political analyst in the mid-1990s, reporting on New Labour’s rise under Tony Blair. Later, during the 1997 General Election, he made a name for himself by making amusing remarks. Vine became the Johannesburg-based Africa Journalist after the 1997 election, traveling across Africa.

His research assignments took him to the front lines to report on the Eritrean-Ethiopian War, the Angolan Civil War, and the conflict in Lesotho after South African forces joined, and he hoisted the South African flag over the Royal Palace amid leadership conflicts. He also studied in Algiers and Kenya during political elections.

Jeremy Vine work
Caption: Jeremy working on his new series, Source: Instagram

As a result, Vine was able to secure interviews with key leaders in various African countries. The majority of these individuals included former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and Sudan’s Islamist government leader in Khartoum. To report on, he has written about Mali, Zambia, Sierra Leone, and the Niger Delta in Africa.

BBC Work Experience

Vine gave an exclusive report on South African police brutality to BBC Two’s Newsnight in April 1999. The film won the Silver Nymph award at the Monte Carlo Television Festival and resulted in the suspension of 22 police officers. Vine joined Newsnight full-time as a co-presenter in July 1999, after filling in for Jeremy Paxman the previous two summers, according to the BBC.

Vine was a founding member of BBC Radio 4’s Broadcast House and hosted The Politics Show on BBC One from its inception in 2003 until Jon Sopel took over in 2005. He was announced as Peter Snow’s replacement for hosting the BBC election graphics, including the popular Swingometer, in May 2006.

His victory in the England and Wales council elections on April 30, 2008, was widely criticized. From 2007 to 2009, he co-presented the Teaching Awards with Kate Thornton (2007), Myleene Klass (2008), and Christine Lampard (2009). Vine was the host of Points of View from 2008 to 2018, succeeding Terry Wogan.

On October 6, 2008, he began hosting the BBC Two quiz show Eggheads, while the series spin-off, Are You an Egghead? Dermot Murnaghan, the show’s daily host, first mentioned it. After the spin-off show ended, Vine began hosting the second half of each series, with Murnaghan hosting the first.

Vine took over as host of Channel 5’s weekday morning public affairs show, The Wright Stuff, from Matthew Wright in September 2018. The show’s name has now been changed to Jeremy Vine. Vine stated that he will continue to present his Radio 2 lunchtime program on weekends.

Radio 2 program

Following several stints as a stand-in for Jimmy Young on BBC Radio 2 Vine, he took over the weekday lunchtime series on January 6, 2003. The show is a mix of news-based discussions with listeners’ opinions interspersed with popular music. After Vine took over as host, the series was redesigned.

Despite the loss of the daily food slot on Thursday, the legal advice slots on Monday Health and Friday were changed. Friday shows frequently feature a connection to gardener Terry Walton. Lucy Berry worked as the show’s in-house poet until October 2006.

Personal Life of Jeremy Vine

When it comes to Vine’s personal life, he is a married man. He married Rachel Schofield, an English journalist and news anchor. The lovely couple has two daughters named Martha Vine and Anne Vine. Vine’s wife Rachel, on the other hand, graduated from Durham University and works for BBC News. Prior to marrying Rachel Vine, he was married to banker Janelle Muntz from 1992 to 2000. Unfortunately, the marriage did not work out. The couple divorced in 2000.

Jeremy Vine
Caption: Jeremy at an award show with his family (Source: married celeb)

Body Measurement of Jeremy Vine

Vine is a very attractive man with a wonderful personality. He stands 5 feet 3 inches tall. He, on the other hand, has a normal body weight. Regrettably, precise information about his body weight and measurements is still unavailable. He, too, has blonde hair and blue eyes.

Social Media

Vine is a social media user. He has a sizable fan base on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. On Facebook, he has over 90k followers, and on Instagram, he has over 17k followers. On Instagram, he has nearly 37 posts. Similarly, he joined Twitter in July 2011 and now has over 729k followers.

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