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Jonathan Ross

English broadcaster and comedian (born 1960)


English broadcaster and comedian (born 1960)

FieldValue
nameJonathan Ross
honorific_suffix
imageJonathan Ross by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg
captionRoss in 2017
birth_nameJonathan Stephen Ross
birth_date
birth_placeLondon, England
alma_materSouthampton College of Art,
School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, University College London
occupation
years_active1970–present
employerBBC (1997–2010, 2014–2018)
Channel 4 (1987–2007, 2009–2014, 2018–present)
ITV (1991–2006, 2009, 2011–present)
spouse
children3
motherMartha Ross
relativesPaul Ross (brother)

School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, University College London Channel 4 (1987–2007, 2009–2014, 2018–present) ITV (1991–2006, 2009, 2011–present)

Jonathan Stephen Ross OBE (born 17 November 1960) is an English broadcaster, television personality, film critic, comedian, and writer. He has presented television comedy chat shows, including BBC's Friday Night with Jonathan Ross (2001–2010) and ITV's The Jonathan Ross Show (2011–present). For the BBC show, he won three British Academy Television Awards for Best Entertainment Performance. Ross hosted his own radio show on BBC Radio 2 from 1999 to 2010. He served as film critic and presenter of the television programme Film… (1999–2010).

Ross began his television career as a TV researcher, before debuting as a presenter for the chat show The Last Resort with Jonathan Ross (1987–1997) on Channel 4. His other television work includes being a panellist on the comedy sports quiz show They Think It's All Over (1999–2005), presenting the British Comedy Awards (1991–2007, 2009–2014), judging on the musical competition The Masked Singer (2020–present) and its spin-off The Masked Dancer (2021–2022), and competing on the reality series The Celebrity Traitors (2025). In 2012, Ross received a Special Recognition award at the National Television Awards.

In 2005, Ross was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to broadcasting. In 2008, he wrote a semi-autobiographical work titled Why Do I Say These Things?, detailing some of his life experiences. He has also written his own comic books, Turf and America's Got Powers.

Early life and education

Jonathan Stephen Ross was born on 17 November 1960 in St Pancras, north London and raised in Leytonstone, east London. The son of John and actress Martha Ross, he has four brothers and one sister. He is the younger brother of journalist, television editor, and media personality Paul Ross.

Their mother put all of her children forward for roles in television advertisements. Ross first appeared in a television advertisement for the breakfast cereal Kellogg's Rice Krispies in 1970, when he was 10 years old. He also appeared in an ad for the laundry detergent Persil.

Ross was educated at the comprehensive schools Norlington School for Boys and Leyton County High School for Boys. He then studied at the Southampton College of Art and took a degree in Modern European History at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES) in London, which today forms part of University College London.

Ross began his adult career as a researcher on the Channel 4 show Loose Talk. After leaving this, he worked on various other shows before beginning another research job on Soul Train, which became Solid Soul. It is believed his first appearance on television was as an extra in the 1981 It Ain't Half Hot, Mum episode "The Last Roll Call".

Career

1987–95: Channel X

Whilst on Solid Soul, he met fellow researcher Alan Marke, and the two devised what would prove to be a breakthrough hit for Ross in 1987, The Last ResortThe Last Resort with Jonathan Ross.

The two men based their concept on the successful American show Late Night with David Letterman, and formed a new production company called Channel X, to produce a pilot. Ross had not planned to be the show's host, but he presented the show from its debut in January 1987.

While the series was initially a co-production with Colin Callender, ownership transferred to Marke and Ross, meaning that the latter retained a great deal of control as well as being presenter. The show was successful for both Ross and for Channel 4, making him one of the major personalities on the channel. A year later, his documentary series The Incredibly Strange Film Show introduced many to the works of cult filmmakers like Sam Raimi and Jackie Chan. Ross and Raimi appeared together in a British television advertisement for Raimi's 1987 film Evil Dead II.

In 1990 and 1991, his television documentary series Jonathan Ross Presents for One Week Only profiled and interviewed directors including Alejandro Jodorowsky, David Lynch, Aki Kaurismäki and in 2014, the Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar.

In 1989, he co-presented the biennial BBC charity telethon Comic Relief, the same year he launched One Hour with Jonathan Ross a short lived chat show on Channel 4. Its game show segment, "Knock down ginger", introduced comedians such as Vic Reeves, Bob Mortimer, Paul Whitehouse and Charlie Higson to television. In December 1989, Ross appeared on Cilla's Goodbye to the 80s and presented all four members of Queen with the "Top Band of the Eighties" prize in a broadcast for ITV which would turn out to be Freddie Mercury's penultimate public appearance before his death from AIDS in 1991.

Ross presented the annual British Comedy Awards each year from 1991 to 2014 with the exception of 2008 following his suspension from the BBC. In 1992 he presented an interview with Madonna about her Erotica album and Sex Book promotion.

Ross has appeared in numerous television entertainment programmes on several channels throughout the 1990s and 2000s. He was a regular panellist on the sports quiz They Think It's All Over, and hosted the panel game It's Only TV...But I Like It. Other projects include the BBC joke-quiz Gagtag, the Channel 4 variety show Saturday Zoo, new-acts showcase The Big Big Talent Show, and the ITV programme Fantastic Facts.

In 1995, he left Channel X, despite its profitable nature. He was quoted in a 1998 article as stating:

1995–2006

In 1995, he presented Mondo Rosso, a programme about old cult films. He took over presenting of the Film programme, the BBC's long-running cinema review series, in 1999 after Barry Norman left the show. Ross himself has made a number of cameo appearances in films, playing himself in the Spice Girls' film Spice World (1997) and voicing the character of Doris in the UK version of Shrek 2 (2004). In 2001 he also played himself in Only Fools and Horses, presenting Goldrush, a fictional television quiz on which the main character, Del, was a contestant. In 2001 he voiced characters in two episodes of the animated comedy series Rex the Runt. He also appeared on the first pilot show for Shooting Stars, acting as a team captain.

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in March 2001 when he was surprised by Michael Aspel at the BBC Television Centre.

1987, 1999–2010, 2014–2018: BBC Radio

Ross's first radio work was on BBC Radio 1 in 1987, when he sat in for Janice Long for two weeks. Ross began presenting a Saturday morning show on BBC Radio 2 in July 1999. He has also presented radio shows for Virgin Radio (having previously worked on Richard Branson's earlier venture, Radio Radio), as well as the now-defunct commercial radio network service The Superstation, where his producer was Chris Evans. Ross's show on Radio 2 last aired on 17 July 2010 when his contract at the BBC ended.

In August 2014, he returned to Radio 2 as a stand-in presenter on Steve Wright's afternoon show for four days. In March 2015 Jonathan sat in for Steve Wright again from 16 to 27 March 2015. In February 2016 Ross returned to Radio 2 on a regular basis to present the weekly arts show. From 11 January 2018, Anneka Rice took over the arts show.

2001–10: ''Friday Night with Jonathan Ross'' and other projects

In 2001, Ross began presenting his BBC One comedy chat show Friday Night with Jonathan Ross.

In 2004, Ross presented a documentary on one of his favourite subjects, punk rock, for the BBC.

In November 2005, Ross appeared on Gordon Ramsay's The F Word where Ramsay shows Ross how to kill lobster.

In 2005, Ross anchored the BBC television coverage of the Live 8 concerts. Later that year he was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the Queen's Birthday Honours for services to broadcasting. He celebrated the news by playing "God Save the Queen" by The Sex Pistols (which was banned by the BBC when released in 1977) on his BBC Radio 2 Saturday morning show. On 21 June 2006, Ross was made a Fellow of University College London, where he studied.

In early 2006, Ross announced that after eight years he was quitting his regular panellist seat on the sport/comedy quiz show They Think It's All Over explaining: "I need time now to focus on my other commitments and so regrettably I won't be back for the 20th series." Following Ross's departure, only two more episodes of the show were made before it was cancelled.

In January 2006 he presented Jonathan Ross' Asian Invasion, broadcast on BBC Four. The three-part documentary followed Ross as he explored the film industry in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea, interviewing directors and showcasing clips. His interest in East Asian culture and his self-confessed love for Japanese anime and video games led him to making three series of BBC Three show Japanorama, as well as producing another television series for the same channel called Adam and Joe Go Tokyo, starring Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish. He produced the latter programme through his own television production company Hot Sauce.

In April 2006, details of his fees and those of other BBC personalities were leaked to the tabloid press. It was claimed at the time, by a then-unidentified BBC mole, that Ross earned £530,000 per year for hosting his Radio 2 show (equivalent to £10,000 per show). While refusing to comment specifically on the leak in line with BBC policy on the matter, Ross did hint during his radio show that the figure was exaggerated; in addition to this, any pay highlighted as being "his" would actually be split between himself and his producer/co-presenter on the show, Andy Davies.

In June 2006, a bidding war was sparked between BBC and other broadcasters for Ross's services. Although other broadcasters were unsuccessful in poaching Ross, it is believed that their bids were higher than the BBC during negotiations. ITV, who bid for Ross, poached chat host Michael Parkinson around the same time. Ross became the highest paid television personality in Britain, when a new BBC contract secured his services until 2010, for a reported £18 million (£6 million per year). That same month, he was named by Radio Times as the most powerful person in British radio.

On 25 June 2006, he performed at the Children's Party at the Palace for the Queen's 80th birthday. In August 2006, Ross asked the first question in the Yahoo! Answers "Five Million Answers challenge". On 16 March 2007, Ross hosted Comic Relief 2007 alongside Fearne Cotton and Lenny Henry.

In June 2006, when Conservative Party leader David Cameron appeared on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, Ross began a line of questioning relating to Conservative ex-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, culminating in the question "Did you or did you not have a wank thinking of Margaret Thatcher?" Ross was defended by the BBC publicly, but repeat showings of the interview have been banned.

On 7 July 2007, Ross co-presented (with Graham Norton) BBC television coverage of the Live Earth climate change awareness concerts, which became the subject of controversy due to the foul language used by performers including Phil Collins, Madonna and Johnny Borrell, resulting in one of Ofcom's toughest sanctions to date on the BBC. Ross had been required to apologise on the day for the language used by Collins and Borrell.

Ross is well-known as an enthusiastic comic book collector. Starting on 10 September 2007, he presented the BBC Four series Comics Britannia, about the history of the British comic. This forms the core of a Comics Britannia season, which includes another documentary, In Search of Steve Ditko, by Ross. Ross is also greatly interested in Japan, presenting a BBC-TV series on many different aspects of Japanese culture, Japanorama, for three series between 2002 and 2007. In May 2008, Ross won the Sony Gold Award "Music Radio Personality of the Year". On 3 August 2008, he hosted Jonathan Ross Salutes Dad's Army, a BBC One tribute to the sitcom set during World War II.

On 5 December 2007, Ross joked at the British Comedy Awards that his salary meant that he was "apparently worth 1,000 BBC journalists". His quip came shortly after the BBC had announced plans for more than 2,000 job cuts, and was condemned as "obscene" by the general secretary of the National Union of Journalists. Ross has denied this and in a 2011 article is quoted as saying that he was commenting on a piece that was written in a newspaper about his salary being that of 1,000 journalists:

You know where that came from? The newspapers. After the fee was announced, they said, 'The BBC says he's worth 1,000 journalists', so on the Comedy Awards I made a joke that began, 'Apparently I'm worth 1,000 journalists according to the newspapers.' Every time it's quoted, is the word 'apparently' ever used? Which does change the meaning somewhat.

The BBC Trust ruled that Ross's interview with American actress Gwyneth Paltrow, broadcast on 2 May 2008, breached editorial guidelines. They ruled that bad language in an episode of Ross's pre-recorded BBC1 chat show, Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, in which the presenter told Paltrow he "would fuck her", was "gratuitous and unnecessarily offensive". The trust said it disagreed with the judgement made by BBC management that the episode should be broadcast uncensored, adding that the comment was made in an "overly sexual way" and that it had upheld a number of complaints made about the edition of Friday Night with Jonathan Ross. The trust reminded BBC staff that "the casual gratuitous use of the most offensive language is not acceptable on the BBC in accordance with the BBC's existing guidelines and practices", adding that "this particularly applies in entertainment programmes".

''The Russell Brand Show'' and Andrew Sachs

Main article: The Russell Brand Show prank calls

Following a guest appearance by Ross on The Russell Brand Show broadcast on 18 October 2008, Ross was suspended for 12 weeks without pay by the BBC on 29 October, after a series of lewd answerphone messages, including Ross saying, "He fucked your granddaughter", were left for then 78-year-old actor Andrew Sachs regarding Sachs' granddaughter Georgina Baillie, by Russell Brand and Ross, which were broadcast on the pre-recorded show. After little initial interest, a media story about the calls by the Daily Mail generated a high number of complaints. Brand resigned from the BBC, while Ross was suspended without pay. BBC director general Mark Thompson stated that Ross should take the disciplinary action as a "final warning". The BBC was later fined £150,000 by Britain's broadcast regulator for airing the calls.

On 21 November 2008, the BBC Trust said that the phone calls were a "deplorable intrusion with no editorial justification". The trust gave its backing to Ross's 12-week suspension but recommended that no further action be taken against him. He returned to work in January 2009 with a new series of Friday Night. From 23 May 2009, Ross's BBC Radio 2 show was recorded 24 hours before broadcast.

Homophobia allegation

On 13 May 2009, Ross was accused of homophobia after a comment he made on his radio show, in which he said,

If your son asks for a Hannah Montana MP3 player, then you might want to already think about putting him down for adoption in later life, when they settle down with their partner.

An incorrect version of this quote was also circulated, in which Ross was accused of saying:

If your son asks for a Hannah Montana MP3 player, you might want to already think about putting him down for adoption before he brings his ... erm ... partner home.

Ofcom received 61 complaints following the comment. On 7 July 2009, Ofcom ruled that Ross did not breach the broadcasting code. They wrote in their opinion that "the comment was clearly presented as a joke intended to make light of the reactions that some parents may have if their child chooses a toy that is very widely recognised to be designed and marketed for the opposite sex" and that the nature of the joke and tone and manner in which it was presented "made clear that it was not intended to be hostile or pejorative towards the gay community in general." Stonewall criticised the ruling; saying "the fact that a comment is light-hearted does not absolve it from perpetuating the stereotypes that lead to homophobic bullying."

Activities outwith the BBC

In 2010, Ross took part in Channel 4's Comedy Gala, a benefit show held in aid of Great Ormond Street Hospital, filmed live at The O2 Arena in London on 30 March. On 7 April 2010, Ross's first comic book was published. Turf was written by Jonathan himself and drawn by artist Tommy Lee Edwards. In 2011, Ross wrote an introduction for The Steve Ditko Omnibus Vol. 1,{{cite book |last1= Ditko|first1= Steve|author-link1= Steve Ditko|title= The Steve Ditko Omnibus Vol. 1|year= 2011|publisher= DC Comics|location= New York City|isbn= 978-1-4012-3111-8

2010: Leaving the BBC

On 7 January 2010, Ross confirmed that he would leave the BBC in July 2010. This would see him leave all his regular BBC roles, namely his Friday night chat show, Radio 2 show and the film review programme, although he would be continuing with some specials, such as Comic Relief and the BAFTA Awards.

Ross said that while he "had a wonderful time working for the BBC" he had "decided not to re-negotiate when my current contract comes to an end," a choice which was "not financially motivated". The announcement came a day after it became public knowledge that Graham Norton had signed a two-year deal with the BBC. Torin Douglas, the corporation's media correspondent speculated Norton would be a ready-made replacement for Ross's chat show role, while Mark Kermode of BBC Radio 5 Live was a potential successor in the film review role, but that "replacing Ross on radio will be harder." Ross last appeared on the film programme in Episode 10 of Film 2010 with Jonathan Ross aired on 17 March 2010. After Kermode publicly ruled himself out on 26 March, Claudia Winkleman was announced 30 March 2010 as his replacement as host of the Film programme.

Ross's final Friday Night chat show episode aired on 16 July 2010, with David Beckham, Jackie Chan, Mickey Rourke, and Roxy Music as guests. Ross ended the show with an affectionate tribute to his guests and to the audience, while mentioning that he had promised Morrissey that he would remain composed and "wouldn't cry." His final Radio 2 show was broadcast the following day. Patrick Kielty initially took over Ross's Radio 2 slot, after which Graham Norton took over permanently from 2 October that year.

2010–present: ITV and Channel 4

On 19 December 2010, Ross presented a three-hour Channel 4 list show, 100 Greatest Toys, with the broadcaster describing Ross as a "huge toy enthusiast with a private collection that would rival any museum's". In 2012, Ross's voice appeared as a headteacher in Back to School at the Edinburgh Festival. In October 2013, Ross was hired by Xbox (Microsoft) to help promote the brand. In 2011, he presented Penn & Teller: Fool Us on ITV, a collaboration with magicians Penn & Teller, which he would resume hosting when the show moved to The CW in 2014.

Ross's new chat show, The Jonathan Ross Show, began on 3 September 2011 on ITV1, drawing an audience of 4.3m viewers, compared to the 4.6m for his finale on the BBC show. The first series ran for thirteen weeks. Speaking about the new show, Ross said: "I am thrilled and excited that after a short break I will be rolling up my sleeves and creating a brand new show for ITV1."

On 1 March 2014 Loncon 3, the 72nd World Science Fiction Convention, announced that Ross would be the Master of Ceremonies for the 2014 Hugo Awards ceremony, to be held in August at ExCeL London. This generated angry criticism from members of science fiction fandom who objected to the idea, citing Ross's record of controversial statements and actions. Convention committee member Farah Mendlesohn strongly objected to the choice of Ross as MC, and resigned when the Loncon 3 Co-Chairs would not reconsider the choice, writing (in part), '[Ross] is a man who has made a fortune (6 million a year at one point) from abusing others—particularly women—live on air.' He publicly withdrew as MC not long after the announcement, tweeting 'I have decided to withdraw from hosting the Hugo's @loncon3 in response to some who would rather I weren't there. Have a lovely convention.'

On 20 October 2014, it was announced by ITV that Ross had signed a new contract with ITV. The new contract will see him present two more series of his chatshow along with a Christmas Special on ITV in 2015. ITV's Director of Entertainment and Comedy Elaine Bedell added: "Jonathan is the king of talk shows and a valued member of the ITV family. He continues to attract the biggest names in showbiz onto his sofa and I am delighted that he will remain on the channel until at least the end of 2015." Ross said: "I've been lucky enough to interview some of the biggest stars around on The Jonathan Ross Show and I'm delighted that I'll continue to do so for ITV until at least the end of 2015 with two series booked for the channel for next year."

In November 2014, Ross designed a Paddington Bear statue, one of fifty created by various celebrities which were located around London prior to the release of the film Paddington, with the statues auctioned to raise funds for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC).

In 2015, Ross's 2004 interview with Amy Winehouse was featured in Asif Kapadia's highly praised documentary film about the late singer, entitled Amy. In 2017, Ross was a team captain along with Frank Skinner on the ITV panel show Don't Ask Me Ask Britain. In December 2017, Ross presented Guess the Star, a one-off special for ITV. On 9 September 2019, Ross was announced as a judge for The Masked Singer UK, the UK version of the international music game show Masked Singer, which aired on ITV from January 2020.

In September 2020, Ross started hosting his own 30-minute weekly ITV show called Jonathan Ross' Comedy Club. On 4 March 2021, it was announced by ITV that Ross would be on the celebrity panel of a brand new spin-off show of The Masked Singer UK, The Masked Dancer, which aired in spring 2021. Ross made his debut appearance on Celebrity Gogglebox on 2 July 2021, and was joined by his son, Harvey, daughter Honey and her boyfriend. In March 2023, Ross replaced Andrew Collins as presenter of the weekly radio show Saturday Night at the Movies on Classic FM. In May 2025, Ross was announced as a contestant on the upcoming first series of The Celebrity Traitors. Ross was selected as a traitor alongside Alan Carr and Cat Burns but was eventually banished in episode 7.

Personal life

Family and residence

Ross married the author, journalist, and broadcaster Jane Goldman in August 1988 in Las Vegas. They have since had three children: Betty Kitten, Harvey Kirby (named after Jack Kirby, a comic book creator whom Ross especially admires), and Honey Kinny.

Ross's mother, Martha Ross, died on 14 January 2019, at the age of 79.

Ross resides in Hampstead Garden Suburb, London. He owns a second home in Swanage in Dorset and owns property in Florida in the United States.

Ross and others have used his rhotacism for comic effect, and he is sometimes known as "Wossy", including on his Twitter/X feed (@wossy).

Awards and charity

In 2005, Ross was made an OBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours for services to broadcasting. He celebrated the news by playing "God Save the Queen" by the Sex Pistols on his Radio 2 show.

Ross has attended a fundraiser for the James Randi Educational Foundation called The Amazing Meeting in London in 2009 and 2010. Ross has described himself as a big fan of James Randi and the other speakers – who were mainly prominent sceptics – and said that he and his wife had come to have a sceptical view of the world. Ross has been supportive of Simon Singh's efforts to defend an accusation of libel by the British Chiropractic Association and Ross has posed for the Geek Calendar 2011, a fund raiser for The Libel Reform Campaign.

Interests

Ross is a big pop and rock music fan and maintains a particular interest in British punk rock, which captivated him when he was young. The first band he saw in concert was punk band X-Ray Spex at Islington's Hope and Anchor pub in North London. He paid tribute to lead singer Poly Styrene following her death. He has described himself as "about as big a fan of David Bowie as you will find on the planet". The glam art rock band Roxy Music are one of his all-time favourite acts and were invited to perform on the final episode of Friday Night with Jonathan Ross.

Ross is a fan of science fiction, including Doctor Who. He contributed his early memories of the series, which included the 1968 serial The Invasion, to a book which raised funds for Alzheimer's Research UK.

Ross is a fan of the animation studio Studio Ghibli, especially the works of director Hayao Miyazaki, and has been an early proponent of its works before its international popularity. He first saw Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind in 1987, which he praises as "massively underrated", and considers Spirited Away to be a "masterpiece". He would later interview Miyazaki for Japanorama. Ross provided a minor voice role in one episode of Ronja, the Robber's Daughter.

Ross is also a fan of comic books and co-owned a comic shop in London with Paul Gambaccini. He released Turf, his first comic book, in 2010, with American artist Tommy Lee Edwards.

In 2023, Ross was integral to the preservation of the arcade version of Um Jammer Lammy, previously thought to be lost media, by allowing video game archivists access to his arcade cabinet, thought of as one of the world's last examples.

Filmography

Television

As himself

YearTitleRoleChannel
1987–1997The Last ResortPresenterChannel 4
1988–1989The Incredibly Strange Film ShowPresenter
1989–90One Hour with Jonathan RossPresenter
1990–1991Jonathan Ross Presents for One Week OnlyPresenter
1990–92Tonight With Jonathan RossPresenter
1991–2007,
2009–2014British Comedy AwardsPresenter
1992AmericanaCo-presenter
1993Saturday ZooPresenter
1994GagtagPresenterBBC One
1995Mondo RossoPresenterBBC Two
In Search of James Bond with Jonathan RossPresenterITV
In Search of Dracula with Jonathan RossPresenter
1996The Late Jonathan RossPresenter
1996–1997The Big Big Talent ShowPresenterITV
1997In Search of HamletPresenter
1998–2005They Think It's All OverRegular panellistBBC One
1999–2002It's Only TV...but I Like ItPresenter
1999–2010Film...Presenter
2001–2007The Hollywood GreatsPresenter
2001–2010Friday Night with Jonathan RossPresenter
2001–2013,
2017Comic ReliefCo-presenter
2002–2007JapanoramaPresenterBBC Choice
BBC Three
2004Britain's Best SitcomPresenterBBC Two
2006Jonathan Ross' Asian InvasionPresenterBBC Four
2007Comics BritanniaPresenter
In Search of Steve DitkoPresenter
2008Jonathan Ross Salutes Dad's ArmyPresenterBBC One
2009David Lean in Close-UpPresenter
2010100 Greatest ToysPresenterChannel 4
2011, 2015Penn & Teller: Fool UsPresenterITV (series 1)
The CW (series 2)
2011–presentThe Jonathan Ross ShowPresenterITV
2013Celebrity Deal or No DealContestant, won £20,000Channel 4
2015James Bond's Spectre with Jonathan RossPresenterITV
2017Don't Ask Me Ask BritainTeam captain
Guess the StarPresenter
2017–2018Takeshi's CastleVoiceoverComedy Central UK
2018–2019Roast BattleJudge; series 2–3
2018, 2020The Big Narstie ShowGuest, Season 1, Episode 6,Channel 4
2020Jonathan Ross's Comedy ClubPresenterITV
2020–presentThe Masked Singer UKJudge
2021Celebrity GoggleboxCast Member
The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2021Contestant
2021–2022The Masked Dancer UKJudge
20228 Out of 10 Cats Does CountdownGuest team captainChannel 4
The Big Fat Quiz of the YearPanelist (with Rose Matafeo)
Jonathan Ross' New Year Comedy SpecialPresenterITV
2023Jonathan Ross: Must-Watch FilmsPresenterITVX
Myths and Legends with Jonathan RossPresenterMore4
Big Zuu's Big EatsGuestDave
Britain Get SingingJudgeITV
2024Oscars LiveHost
2025The Celebrity TraitorsContestant; series oneBBC One

As actor

YearTitleRoleNotes
1981It Ain't Half Hot MumSoldierEpisode: "The Last Roll Call"
1990Your Cheatin' HeartHimselfEpisode: "This Could Turn Septic On Us,
Ya Big Ungrateful Midden"
1993French and SaundersJohnny CarsonEpisode: "The Silence of the Lambs"
2000Jonathan CreekHimselfEpisode: "The Three Gamblers"
2001HappinessHimselfEpisode: "Celebration"
Rex the RuntAwards Announcer /
Handsome Rex (voice)2 episodes
Only Fools and HorsesHimselfEpisode: "If They Could See Us Now.....!"
2003–2004Bo' Selecta!Himself2 episodes
2006Rob Brydon's Annually RetentiveHimselfEpisode: "1.1"
2006–2007ExtrasHimself2 episodes
2018Legends & LiesJames PettigrewEpisode: "Gettysburg: The High Water Mark"

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1980Breaking GlassExtraUncredited
1981Rise and Fall of Idi AminIsraeli SoldierUncredited
1989The Tall GuyHimself
1994There's No Business...Himself
1997PervirellaBish Archop
Spice WorldHimself
2004Shrek 2Doris the Ugly StepsisterUK dub
2005ValiantBig Thug (voice)

Television advertisements

YearTitleRole
1970Kellogg's Rice KrispiesHimself
PersilHimself
1990Harp LagerHimself
1992IBM 486 ComputerHimself, voice only
1996The Sun/WoolworthsHimself
1997Pizza HutHimself
Austin Powers cinema releaseHimself, voice only
1998The Full Monty home videoHimself, voice only
Sure for MenHimself
1999ONdigitalHimself
2000Fish4Himself, voice only
Milk Marketing BoardHimself, voice only
TVTimesHimself, voice only
2001Nestle Polo SmoothiesHimself, voice only
2008WHSmith Half Price Books OfferHimself, voice only
2010Super Mario Bros. 25th AnniversaryHimself
2012Sky+Himself

Video games

YearVideo gameRoleNotes
2007Halo 3Additional VoicesUncredited
2010Fable IIIBarry Hatch
2013Catcha Catcha Aliens!Main CharacteriOS game. Made by Ross's own company.
2019The Bradwell ConspiracyNarratorVoice only

Animation

YearShowEpisodeCharacter
2012Phineas and FerbTri-State Area: Boot of Secrets (Season 3)The Ducky MoMo guy (cameo)

Honours and awards

  • 2005, Ross was made an OBE by Prince Charles in the Queen's Birthday Honours for services to broadcasting.
  • 2006, made a Fellow of University College, London (UCL), into which his alma mater, SSEES, had been absorbed.
  • 2012, Special Recognition award at the National Television Awards.

References

References

  1. Laws, Roz. (21 February 2010). "7 things you never knew about Jonathan Ross". Birmingham Mail.
  2. (11 September 2020). "Have a laugh with Jonathan's Comedy Club!". The News Letter.
  3. Burrell, Ian. (6 July 2013). "Jonathan Ross: Chattering class". The Independent.
  4. Simpson, Neil. (2007). "Jonathan Ross: The Unauthorised Biography". John Blake Publishing Ltd.
  5. (6 March 2009). "Paul Ross: My life in media - Media, News - The Independent".
  6. Sturcke, James. (29 October 2008). "Jonathan Ross: Profile". [[The Guardian]].
  7. Millar, Iain. (3 August 2003). "Jonathan Ross: The likely lad". The Independent.
  8. (13 November 2008). "Rice Krispies celebrate 80th birthday".
  9. Peter Wynter Bee. (2008). "Jonathan Ross OBE, 'The Prolific TV Presenter'". People of the Day Limited.
  10. Ross, Jonathan. (2009). "Why do I say these things?". Random House.
  11. O'Connell-Davidson, Michael. (29 November 2013). "Who needs a degree? Here are 10 celebrities who dropped out or did badly – who are doing just fine". The Independent.
  12. (22 June 2006). "UCL Fellowships conferred".
  13. (7 January 2010). "Jonathan Ross's most memorable moments". BBC.
  14. Bunz, Mercedes. (7 January 2010). "Jonathan Ross's career: timeline".
  15. "About Jonathan Ross". BBC.
  16. 'Baggy fashion is blamed for trouble at t'mill', Roland Rudd, ''The Times'', 2 June 1988.
  17. Faraci, Devin. (10 July 2011). "Babyface Sam Raimi Scares Jonathan Ross In Vintage Evil Dead II UK Ad".
  18. "BBC – Radio 2 – Presenters – Jonathan Ross". BBC.
  19. "CINEPHILIA and FILMMAKING • A comprehensive list of Jonathan Ross Presents for...".
  20. Henry, Robin. (1 November 2008). "Jonathan Ross may never return to BBC says Sir Terry Wogan". [[The Times]].
  21. "The British Comedy Awards – The British Comedy Awards – History".
  22. 'Hot enough for another bite at the telly', ''[[The Guardian]]'', 13 July 1998.
  23. (15 August 2014). "Jonathan Ross returns to BBC Radio 2". BBC News.
  24. "Corrections and Clarifications – Archive 2015 – Help and Feedback".
  25. Morley, Paul. (12 November 2004). "Punk and disorderly". The Observer.
  26. The F Word. (8 August 2020). "Jonathan Ross HATED The Soup {{!}} The F Word FULL EPISODE".
  27. Smith, Steve. (24 November 2005). "Episode #1.5".
  28. Julia Day [https://www.theguardian.com/uk_news/story/0,,1756028,00.html "Radio 2 stars' salaries leaked"] {{Webarchive. link. (7 October 2023 , ''The Guardian'', 18 April 2006)
  29. Owen Gibson [https://www.theguardian.com/uk_news/story/0,,1776263,00.html "BBC unmasks mole who leaked salary details of its biggest stars"] {{Webarchive. link. (7 October 2023 , ''The Guardian'', 17 May 2006)
  30. [https://www.theguardian.com/media/2006/jun/09/broadcasting.bbc2 'Ross to stay at the BBC'] Ben Dowell, ''The Guardian'', 9 June 2006
  31. (6 June 2006). "Ross 'is radio's most powerful'". BBC News.
  32. Ross, Jonathan. (2006). "If mankind wipes itself out, what species will become the dominant life form, and why?".
  33. "Jonathan Ross ponders life after humans". Yahoo! UK & Ireland Answers Team.
  34. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2251285,00.html 'BBC to ban repeats of Ross versus Cameron'] {{Webarchive. link. (12 January 2008 ''The Times'', 1 July 2006)
  35. Plunkett, John. (9 April 2008). "Ofcom raps BBC over Live Earth swearing". The Guardian.
  36. (7 July 2007). "Foul-mouthed Start To Live Earth". Contact Music.
  37. (1 January 1970). "BBC profile for ''Comics Britannia''". BBC.
  38. "Gold Award Winner!".
  39. Wilkes, Neil. (4 August 2008). "Strong Sunday showing for 'Marple' mystery".
  40. link. (8 December 2008 ''Press Gazette'', 6 December 2007)
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  42. Tara Conlan at Broadcasting House and Leigh Holmwood. (21 November 2008). "BBC Trust criticises Jonathan Ross over lewd comment to Gwyneth Paltrow". Guardian.
  43. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7742130.stm At a glance: BBC Trust report] BBC News, 21 November 2008
  44. (29 October 2008). "Brand and Ross suspended by BBC". BBC.
  45. (30 October 2008). "The ups and downs of Ross' career". BBC News.
  46. (30 October 2008). "Ross suspended for three months". BBC News.
  47. Khan, Urmee. (3 April 2009). "BBC fined £150,000 over Brand's prank calls". The Daily Telegraph.
  48. (21 November 2008). "'No justification' for Brand show". BBC.
  49. (22 May 2009). "Ross's radio show no longer live –". BBC News.
  50. Geen, Jessica. [http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-12406.html "Exclusive: Jonathan Ross accused of homophobia"] {{Webarchive. link. (15 May 2009 , ''Pink News'', 13 May 2009. Retrieved 14 May 2009)
  51. [http://www.ofcom.org.uk/tv/obb/prog_cb/obb137/Issue137.pdf "Ofcom Broadcast Bulletin Issue 137"] {{webarchive. link. (10 July 2009, [[Ofcom]], 6 July 2009. Retrieved 6 July 2009)
  52. "Jonathan Ross's gay 'joke' was wrong". Guardian.
  53. Geen, Jessica. [http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-13122.html "Stonewall: Ross's 'light-hearted' comment still encourages bullying"] {{Webarchive. link. (8 July 2009 , ''[[Pink News]]'', 6 July 2009. Retrieved 6 July 2009)
  54. (20 August 2009). "Turf – Jonathan Ross And Tommy Lee Edwards' New Comic Bleeding Cool Comic Book, Movies and TV News and Rumors". Bleedingcool.com.
  55. (7 January 2010). "Jonathan Ross confirms he is to quit BBC". inthenews.co.uk.
  56. (7 January 2010). "Jonathan Ross is leaving the BBC". BBC.
  57. MacInnes, Paul. (29 March 2010). "Claudia Winkleman named as Jonathan Ross's successor on Film 2010". The Guardian.
  58. (7 January 2010). "Jonathan Ross to quit as TV and radio host with the BBC". BBC.
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  60. (9 December 2010). "100 Greatest Toys with Jonathan Ross – The Panel". Channel 4.
  61. (6 August 2012). "Back to School, ***; Would be Nice Though, **** Pleasance off-site".
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  63. (17 August 2011). "Jonathan Ross: gagged but talking back". The Guardian.
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  65. (7 July 2010). "Ross signs new ITV chat show deal". BBC News.
  66. (3 March 2014). ""Hugo MC Withdraws" ''Locus Online'' 3 March, 2014".
  67. (20 October 2014). "Jonathan Ross signs new deal with ITV until end of 2015". Digital Spy.
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  69. "ITV confirms new exclusive deal with Jonathan Ross and two more series of The Jonathan Ross Show for 2015". presscentre.
  70. "Why Paddington Bear Statues Have Taken Over London". Condé Nast.
  71. Murphy, Shaunna. (3 November 2014). "Emma Watson Designed A Paddington Bear For Charity And It's Freaking Adorable". MTV.
  72. Aftab, Kaleem. (16 May 2015). "Review: Asif Kapadia's Amy Winehouse Documentary is Heartbreaking and Extraordinary". IndieWire.
  73. "ITV announces host and panel for new ITV show The Masked Singer".
  74. "Jonathan Ross' Comedy Club – Watch episodes".
  75. "ITV commissions The Masked Dancer".
  76. "The Masked Dancer: All the celebrity dancers unmasked – CBBC Newsround".
  77. (3 July 2021). "Jonathan Ross Made His Celebrity Gogglebox Debut But All Anyone Could Talk About Was A Certain Piece Of (Incredible) Furniture".
  78. (11 March 2023). "The week in audio: Dynamite Doug; Death of an Artist; Cover Up: Ministry of Secrets and more".
  79. (21 August 2025). "The Celebrity Traitors - Everything you need to know". BBC Media Centre.
  80. (2025-10-29). "Celebrity Traitors episode seven: Backstabbing, dirty work and an iconic exit speech".
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  82. (24 January 2019). "Martha Ross-Phillips obituary". The Comet (UK).
  83. (27 December 2018). "Jonathan Ross' House is a Marvel-lous treat for comic book fans".
  84. Reporter, J. C.. (12 June 2020). "Meet the tuneful charity biker who has Jonathan Ross singing her praises".
  85. (18 July 2005). "Wossie the £1M Squire".
  86. "Jonathan Ross:' I realised I had to wheel and deal after I turned 50'".
  87. (29 June 2006). "Unwepentant Wossy".
  88. (10 June 2005). "OBE for broadcaster Jonathan Ross". BBC News.
  89. (11 June 2005). "Ross Hails OBE by playing Sex Pistols". BBC News.
  90. (31 October 2010). "TAM London 2010 – The interviews".
  91. (31 October 2010). "The Geek Calendar 2011". The Daily Telegraph.
  92. Lachno, James. (26 April 2011). "X-Ray Spex singer Poly Styrene dies aged 53". The Daily Telegraph.
  93. Ross, Jonathan. (9 January 2013). "Bowie's comeback places him back at the centre of the whole shebang". The Guardian.
  94. Hilton, Boyd. (16 July 2010). "Jonathan Ross's final Friday Night: an insider review of his last BBC TV show". The Guardian.
  95. Jones, Paul. (4 November 2012). "Behind the Sofa: Charlie Brooker, Neil Gaiman and Jonathan Ross's Doctor Who memories".
  96. (26 April 2019). "Jonathan Ross Talks About His Ghibli Fandom".
  97. Aitkenhead, Decca. (9 April 2010). "Jonathan Ross: Can I be honest with you?". [[The Guardian]].
  98. (3 May 2023). "Found the last Um Jammer Lammy NOW!".
  99. "Jonathan Ross' Comedy Club – ITV Stand-Up".
  100. "Jonathan Ross' Comedy Club – Series 1 – Episode 2 – ITV Hub".
  101. "Jonathan Ross, Davina McCall, Rita Ora, Ken Jeong to be "The Masked Singer" Guessers".
  102. "The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2021".
  103. "8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown".
  104. (26 December 2022). "Big Fat Quiz: Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2022".
  105. "Jonathan Ross' New Year Comedy Special".
  106. "Jonathan Ross: Must-Watch Films".
  107. "Jonathan Ross takes to the road to uncover the UK's Myths and Legends".
  108. "BAFTA-Winning Big Zuu's Big Eats Series Four Celebrity Line Up Revealed".
  109. "ITV announces line-up for this year's Britain Get Singing".
  110. (8 March 2024). "Oscars Live".
  111. (21 August 2025). "The Celebrity Traitors - Everything you need to know". BBC Media Centre.
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