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MICHAEL BUERK

'Michael Duncan Buerk' (born 18 February 1946) is a BBC journalist and newsreader, most famous for his reporting (with photography by Mohamed Amin) of the Ethiopian famine on 23 October, 1984, which inspired the Band Aid charity record. Buerk was born in Solihull, and was educated at Solihull School, a Independent school in the West Midlands. In later life he attended the University of Sussex.
After working for the ''South Wales Echo'' and ''Daily Mail'', he joined Radio Bristol from 1970 before becoming a reporter for BBC News in 1973. He has presented the news more than 4000 times, including:

★ the Nine O'Clock News (in the 1990s)

★ the BBC Ten O'Clock News (2000 to 2002)

★ the Breakfast programme

★ ''999 Lifesavers''

★ the ''Moral Maze'' on BBC Radio 4 (since 1990)

★ ''The Choice'' (since 1998)
On Children In Need, Buerk has appeared with an ensemble of BBC News presenters. In 2004 he, alongside other BBC newsreaders, dressed in leather to perform Duran Duran classics and in 2005 to sing the Bohemian Rhapsody. He is sometimes imitated by Jon Culshaw on ''Dead Ringers'', which he has said he enjoys.
Buerk asserted in a ''Radio Times'' interview in August 2005 that the "shift in the balance of power between the sexes" has gone too far and that men are now little more than "sperm donors". In particular, he objected to the many women now in senior positions within the BBC, echoing the outburst the previous year by sacked former Director General, Alasdair Milne. This was in anticipation of Buerk's 45-minute TV-essay, 'Michael Buerk on What Are Men For?" as part of Five's six-part "Don't Get Me Started!" series, broadcast on Tuesday 23 August 2005. The reaction to "What Are Men For?" was quite severe, criticising in particular Buerk's choices of sympathetic interview subjects, including "an odious chauvinistic farmer" and "a ridiculous Sloane" (Sam Wollaston in the Guardian's G2 supplement on 24 August 2005).
Buerk has also criticised some of his colleagues for being overpaid "lame brains". He retired from domestic newscasting in 2002.
The physical appearance of the BBC's former arts correspondent, Rosie Millard, was overtly admired by Michael. When corresponding on the 2001 Oscars, he commented on her wearing the ''best supporting dress''.
He currently lives in Guildford with his wife, with whom he has twin sons. One of his sons, Roland Buerk, survived the South Asian tsunami on Boxing Day, 2004. Earlier in 2004, he had published his autobiography called ''The Road Taken''. He now presents Midlands Today Wednesdays to Fridays with Nick Owen at 6.30pm. Michael began his new job and presented his first bulletin on April 24th 2007.
This came after a relaunch of the programme prompted some fresher presenters to given the anchoring jobs on the main programme alongside the main man.
On July 28, 2007, Buerk appeared on a special celebrity version of ''Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?'' with Jennie Bond to raise money for NCH the children's charity. With a combined effort, they raised £64, 000.

Contents
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Michael Buerk through the years.

Leaving the Ten O'Clock News

Michael upsets Manchester.

His autobiography.

The Choice

The Moral Maze

Jon Culshaw as Michael Buerk on the BBC's ''Dead Ringers''

Midlands Today

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