BBC insider reveals disturbing allegations about Chris Moyles

When Chris Moyles revealed in 2012 that he was stepping down from his BBC breakfast show, one line kept surfacing in his farewell remarks: “We have had the best time ever.”

That immediately raised a question — who exactly was included in that “we”?

Moyles, who once styled himself as the “Saviour of Radio 1,” appeared to be speaking on behalf of a broad mix of producers, runners, researchers, executives and others across the station and the wider BBC.

Yet that version of events was far from universally shared. According to accounts from those familiar with his final years on the show, by the end of his eight-year run only Moyles and a tight-knit group around him still seemed to believe the atmosphere was enjoyable, while others were left dealing with what has been described as “tw**ish” and “entitled” behaviour.

“It was like he got a kick out of making people uncomfortable,” one former BBC staff member said.

Although the complaints being voiced are not of the same nature as those made about his former colleague Scott Mills — allegations that resulted in Mills losing his high-profile role as host of the Radio 2 Breakfast Show — fresh scrutiny is now being directed at why the BBC allowed Moyles to spend years, according to critics, behaving in a manner they describe as “laddish” and “nasty.”

Some will recall, for example, his endless on-air attacks on the Girls Aloud singer, Nicola Roberts. For six years he called her vile names such as ‘horsey chops’ and a ‘sour-faced old cow’.

Chris Moyles in his studio in 2003… the Leeds-born, self-styled ‘saviour of Radio 1’ has been accused of behaving in a ‘laddish’ and ‘nasty’ manner

While on air, he repeatedly bullied Girls Aloud singer Nicola Roberts (pictured far right with her bandmates and Moyles), which she said greatly affected her confidence

Despite the small circle around Moyles that once offered protection, Dolly Busby reveals that the radio host, now 52, was despised by many who worked underneath him

Nicola was only in her early twenties at the time and later revealed Moyles’s public bullying significantly affected her confidence, saying she struggled to look in the mirror and adding: ‘For years I felt like the ugly one in Girls Aloud.’

However, today I can reveal that behind the scenes, Moyles, now 52, was despised by many of those who worked underneath him.

A former BBC employee tells me: ‘He constantly made people feel stupid or embarrassed. It was relentless: he was loathed in the office because it was all so mean and unnecessary. It made for a bad atmosphere. And, no, it wasn’t “lad banter”, which was the usual party line. We can all take that to a certain extent. He was difficult and wouldn’t cooperate if it didn’t suit him.’

My source added: ‘But if Chris liked you, he could be charming and those he did like were completely taken in by him. They wouldn’t hear a bad word, so a “circle of loyalty” normalised his behaviour.’

Increasingly, Moyles’s former colleagues are starting to speak out publicly.

Last month, Radio 1 star Greg James told of his treatment by Moyles when he joined the station as an eager young presenter in 2007, aged 21.

In his memoir, All The Best For The Future, James, now 40, revealed his surprise at being called ‘the posh student’ – apparently based on his love of cricket – by Moyles, who was supposed to be a mentor.

Moyles quickly took against James – who is now the host of the Radio 1 Breakfast show.

Hertfordshire-born James, whose parents are both teachers, said: ‘Imagine my surprise when I turned up at Radio 1 and was thrust into the incredible daytime line-up to do the Early Breakfast show before Chris Moyles every day, only for him to start calling me “the posh student”.

‘I really wasn’t expecting that. I don’t help myself with the cricket thing, but it felt reductive to be called that.

‘Moyles didn’t know anything about me. He had no idea what my upbringing was like.

Moyles’ former colleagues, including Radio 1 star Greg James, are starting to speak out against his behaviour

In his memoir, All the Best for the Future, James revealed his shock at being called ‘the posh student’ by his mentor Moyles. ‘He had no idea what my upbringing was like,’ James said

In 2012, Moyles was sacked from the Radio 1 Breakfast show and later replaced by the hugely popular Nick Grimshaw, 11 years his junior. (Pictured hosting Radio X in 2022)

‘He saw what he thought was a nice, excited, slightly boring 21-year-old from the Home Counties with fantastic flowing indie hair who he could wind up a bit because I was new and just very happy to be there.’

Eventually, in 2012, Moyles was called into a meeting by Radio 1’s new controller, Ben Cooper, who told him he had been sacked from the Breakfast show to be replaced by Nick Grimshaw, 11 years his junior.

‘I was a bit miffed that the story that went out was that I was too old and I had got fired,’ reflected Moyles on Ross Kemp’s podcast in 2020.

‘I thought they handled it really badly. Then when [Grimshaw’s] show failed and the listening figures fell, I was like, “Not that f-ing easy, is it boys?”’

At the time of the sacking, Cooper promised a new role for the ‘furious’ presenter, but instead Moyles left the BBC and took a three-year break from radio.

In 2015, he started working as Breakfast show host for Radio X, bringing over his former Radio 1 producer, Pippa Taylor and newsreader, Dominic Byrne. Moyles continues to present on Radio X even though questions about his behaviour at Radio 1 continue to mount.

Recently, I wrote about a resurfaced clip from 2002 in which Moyles, who was 27 at the time, offered to take the virginity of then-underage star Charlotte Church when she turned 16. I received a phone call that left me stunned.

It was from a PR associate of Moyles, who defended the historic clip and admitted that while inappropriate, his comments were simply a symptom of noughties ‘lad culture’.

I disagree – and so, it seems, does Church herself. Five years after Moyles had creepily asked to take her virginity, the Welsh star brought him on her Channel 4 programme, The Charlotte Church Show, and asked him to ‘explain your behaviour’.

Moyles was invited on to the Charlotte Church Show in 2006 to explain the vulgar comments he made a few years earlier about wanting to take her virginity

‘You were under 16, yeah, 15. But you were gonna be 16, and I offered to take your virginity,’ he said. Instead of backing down, Moyles dubbed his revolting line a ‘sweet’ proposal

Moyles said: ‘Well, you were under 16, yeah, 15. But you were gonna be 16, and I offered to take your virginity.’

The crowd began to laugh and Charlotte probed: ‘What exactly did you say?’

Moyles had said he wanted to ‘lead [the singer] through the forest of sexuality now that she had reached 16’, a revolting line he defended as a ‘sweet’ proposal.

When I told my BBC source about the bizarre phone call from the PR trying to defend this behaviour, they said: ‘That doesn’t surprise me. It was always put down to “lad culture”, “lad banter”, but that wasn’t it. He was an entitled t*** who made inappropriate comments like that.’

Indeed, his 2006 memoir, The Gospel According to Chris Moyles, is full of evidence of his being difficult to work with.

‘A lot of people think I’m a bastard to deal with, I’m not,’ insisted Moyles. ‘I’m the bad guy on air. Moyles is the bully. Moyles is the ego. I am a nice person. I’m just a bit of a git on the radio. It’s what I do.’

Elsewhere, he urged those working with him: ‘Be able to “handle” me, not be intimidated by me.’

Elsewhere, he makes repeated vulgar references to women, including even his own agent, Vivienne Clore, of whom he wrote: ‘She does have large breasts and is actually quite sweet.’

In his 2006 memoir, Moyles wrote: ‘A lot of people think I’m a bastard to deal with, I’m not… I am a nice person. I’m just a bit of a git on the radio. It’s what I do’

Tina Daheley, who was a sports reader on the Breakfast show and is of Indian heritage, said Moyles picked on her for how she looked

'No matter how historic they may be, it seems Moyles’s previous misdemeanours will not remain "a problem of their time" and are very much becoming part of his present,' writes Dolly

‘No matter how historic they may be, it seems Moyles’s previous misdemeanours will not remain “a problem of their time” and are very much becoming part of his present,’ writes Dolly

But some of his comments, although they might have been dressed up as jokes, caused upset among his co-presenters.

In 2018, Tina Daheley, who was a sports reader on the Breakfast show from 2010 to 2012, spoke out about working with the DJ.

On air, the presenter, who is of Indian heritage, was picked on for how she looked and became a running joke as a potential date for visiting pop stars.

She said: ‘There was an assumption based on the music I liked, so Chris would try to set me up with Tinie Tempah or another black guest.

‘Put it this way, when we did our final [Moyles Breakfast show] and could invite friends and family, I wouldn’t have dreamed of inviting my 6ft 5in dad in a turban there.’

It was Prince William, the 45-year-old explained, who made her realise the mistreatment she had endured.

Daheley said: ‘The first thing he said to me was that he was such a fan and that he’d been listening to me for years. The second was: “I’m really pleased that some presenters now aren’t as mean to you now as other presenters.”’

Perhaps most tellingly, she went on to credit Grimshaw, who succeeded Moyles as frontman – not ‘producers, editors or managers’ – for ‘normalising’ Radio 1, doing away with hierarchy and ‘a culture where the star is untouchable’.

No matter how historic they may be, it seems Moyles’s previous misdemeanours will not remain ‘a problem of their time’ and are very much becoming part of his present.

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