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Channel 4 celebrates International Transgender Day of Visibility

Stephanie Hirst
Stephanie Hirst

Award-winning radio star Stephanie Hirst joins Channel 4’s Continuity Team to celebrate International Transgender Day of Visibility.

Channel 4 marks International Transgender Day of Visibility today, Friday March 31 by handing control of the continuity announcer’s mic to award-winning radio host Stephanie Hirst.

Stephanie will take command of Channel 4’s continuity announcer’s booth from 6pm, going into The Simpsons, and be on air until First Dates at 11.10pm. As she makes the links to the programmes she will also share her personal experiences to raise awareness for International Transgender Day of Visibility.

Dan Brooke, Channel 4’s Chief Marketing and Communications Officer and Board Diversity Champion, said: “Diversity is the lifeblood of Channel 4 and it’s important we champion and hear all voices on the channel. I’m thrilled that Stephanie will be helping us mark International Transgender Day of Visibility and sharing her experiences as a transgender person with our viewers.”

Stephanie, who has been polishing her scripts with the help of Channel 4 Continuity Creative Managers Isla Paton and Barra Fitzgibbon, said: “It is so important to mark International Transgender Day of Visibility, helping educate society that trans people can be, and should be wholly accepted in all areas of their lives for whom they truly are. Alongside this, it is a true honour to share my positive story with Channel 4 viewers.”

Stephanie is well-known to millions of UK radio listeners with a career that has seen her work on some of the biggest commercial radio shows in the UK, including three years on the national Sunday top 40 show, Hit40UK, where she interviewed some of the world’s biggest stars.

Along with that success she suffered an inner turmoil that her gender was wrong – something she had known since her very early childhood.

This was compounded by a feeling that the more successful she became, the more imprisoned she felt which led to Stephanie seriously considering taking her own life on several occasions.

But she reached a point where she had to take what she has described as “the biggest risk I will ever take – to transition from male to female” and revealed she was transgender during a live national radio interview on October 11, 2014.

Now Stephanie says that she is living proof that anything is achievable in life. Her career has continued to flourish, the Radio Academy awarded her a fellowship, the highest honour it awards to people in the industry and she has been awarded an honorary doctorate from Leeds Beckett University for her contribution to public life.

She mentored on ITV’s Lorraine Change One Thing campaign, she’s presented on BBC Breakfast, BBC Inside Out and written for various national press and media, is proactively involved in the promotion of LGBT+ rights and is an inspirational public speaker.

Stephanie’s participation is the latest contribution to a long-term project run by Channel 4’s Continuity Team, Alternative Voices, which launched in 2013 when five people with communication difficulties joined the continuity to introduce some of its biggest peak time shows.

HIV charity apologise for Brighton Half Marathon course being short

Earlier this month Brighton Half Marathon was contacted by UK Athletics following concerns raised regarding the length of this year’s course and the course in 2015 and 2016.

Over recent weeks the organisers of Brighton Half Marathon, The Sussex Beacon have been conducting a formal investigation into the matter and have found that unfortunately the course has been short by 146 metres (0.09 miles) for each of these particular race years.

The area of concern centred on the turning point just after mile four where the course passes Roedean School, on the cliffs between Brighton and Rottingdean, before turning and heading back towards Brighton.

Concerns raised by UK Athletics’ were not observational regarding the course layout, but were based on an analysis of GPS data.

The accuracy of GPS devices is a hot topic within running at the moment, with some runners reporting variances for the race both under and over the correct half marathon distance. However, internal investigation by the race organisers has looked not only at runner data, but also internal procedures for delivering how the course was set out for each event.

Organisers have concluded that the eastern turning point has been positioned incorrectly over the last three half marathons, resulting in a shortfall in the overall half marathon distance.

Sussex Beacon say they are “devastated” that this mistake has happened and apologise unreservedly to all runners who took part in the affected race years.

Simon Dowe
Simon Dowe

Simon Dowe, CEO of the Sussex Beacon, HIV charity which organises the race, said: “We can’t apologise enough for this mistake. I know it’s hugely disappointing to everyone who trained so hard. I also know that for some, the news will be devastating as it affects race times, personal bests and records. Our thoughts are very much with the runners. I’m so sorry that their remarkable achievements and the money raised for good causes may be overshadowed by this error.”

Martin Harrigan
Martin Harrigan

Race Director Martin Harrigan from E3 Group, added: “We are a team of runners ourselves so we fully understand the impact of this news. We are really upset that this mistake has happened and we take full responsibility for this situation. We remain committed to making the 2018 Brighton Half Marathon a great event.”

This years half marathon was started by international Superstar DJ Norman Cook (aka Fat Boy Slim) who after starting the 8,000 runners off ran himself in the race to raise money for the charity Young Epilepsy.

Team Beacon runners who ran to raise money exclusively for the Sussex Beacon who are presently in danger of closing, raised in excess of £30,000.

The Sussex Beacon offers specialist care and support for men, women and families affected by HIV. They operate 365 days a year to help people manage the everyday realities of living with this life-long condition.

Their 10 bed Inpatient Unit helps people living with serious HIV related illnesses, initiating new drug therapies or struggling with some of the extreme side effects of anti-retroviral drug regimes.

They run services for women and families and a regular day service for socially isolated people with complex medical conditions associated with HIV. They also offer end of life care.

 

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