Paul Hudson

Paul David Hudson (born 27 February 1971) is an English weather presenter for BBC Yorkshire and BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. Hudson was born and raised in Keighley, West Yorkshire. He was made an Honorary Fellow of Bradford College in 2014.[1]

Paul Hudson
Born
Paul David Hudson

(1971-02-27) 27 February 1971
EducationNewcastle University
OccupationWeather presenter and climate change correspondent
Years active1997–present
EmployerBBC Yorkshire
BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire
Known forLook North from Leeds
Look North from Hull

After reading geophysics and planetary physics at Newcastle University, Hudson joined the Met Office and did two years at Leeds Weather Centre. Hudson combined this with a two-year stint as a weather presenter for BBC Look North and for the BBC local radio stations in Leeds, York, Humberside and Sheffield.

Hudson is known for his tongue-in-cheek banter with BBC Look North presenter Harry Gration, and also Peter Levy, presenter of BBC Look North for the East Riding, Lincolnshire and parts of Nottinghamshire via the Belmont transmitter.

Early life

Hudson was born in Keighley, West Riding of Yorkshire.[2] His parents purchased his first 'kids weather centre' when he was seven, and by the age of twelve he was compiling his own meteolorogical records (now archived by Keighley Library) and writing for local newspapers Keighley News and Telegraph & Argus.[1] He went to the Brontë Middle School and Oakbank School on Oakworth Road in Keighley.[3]

Hudson has a first-class degree in Geophysics and Planetary Physics from the University of Newcastle.[3] His early memories of local weather forecasting came from fellow Yorkshireman, Doncaster's Bob Rust.[1]

Hudson attended training at the Meteorological Office College, situated at the former RAF Shinfield base in Shinfield, Berkshire. Due to a shortage of available posts within the Met Office, he worked as a geophysicist for an oil business in London.[1]

Career

After university and training at the Met Office College, Hudson worked for an oil business as a geophysicist until joining the Met Office as an international forecaster involving monsoons and typhoons.[1]

Television

Hudson can be seen on Three editions of the regional news programmes Look North, from Leeds (serving North, West and South Yorkshire and the North Midlands) Hull (serving East Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and north Norfolk) and Newcastle (serving North East, Cumbria and Northumberland

Hudson returned to the BBC Yorkshire weather centre from the Met Office's old home of Bracknell in 1997 when Darren Bett left to present national forecasts.

In The Little Prince, Hudson voice-acted the English dubbing for The Great Inventor (during the Planet of Bubble Gob trilogy) and Ferdinand (Planet of the Globies).

BBC climate change correspondent

Although most BBC forecasters are not directly employed by the BBC, but by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills' Met Office (formerly the MOD's Met Office), since 2007 Hudson has been a full-time member of BBC staff, not the Meteorological Office, acting as an environmental and climate change expert.[1] Hudson gives talks on the subject to local organisations and school and has appeared on BBC One's Morning Show.

Radio

Hudson can also be heard on BBC Radio Leeds, BBC Radio Sheffield, BBC Radio York, BBC Radio Humberside, BBC Radio Lincolnshire, BBC Radio Cumbria, BBC Radio Newcastle, BBC Radio Tees

Wetwang public office

In May 2006, Hudson was elected honorary Mayor of Wetwang. This post was previously occupied by Richard Whiteley.[4]

Preceded by
Richard Whiteley
Mayor of Wetwang
May 2006
Succeeded by
Incumbent

Publications

Hudson has written several books.[1]

Personal life

Hudson was married to Nicola Shaw, a fellow BBC presenter, in 2003 having two children.[5] He enjoys sea fishing, playing golf (he used to play at Riddlesden golf club, and now plays at Moor Allerton), cricket (he played for Ingrow St Johns in the Craven League). He supports Bradford City, having a twenty-five-year season ticket, and was trapped in the stand that caught fire in the Bradford City stadium fire of 1985.[3]

gollark: Why would you hardcode an integer length *and* such a bizarrely specific one?
gollark: Or is it 11 bytes?
gollark: Wait, does `int(11)` mean an 11-bit integer or what?
gollark: What if you secretly sabotage the `options` table, for purposes?
gollark: You should just commit minor corporate espionage and upload the entire database to the osmarks.net apioprocessing systems.

See also

References

  1. Honorary Fellow Paul Hudson Bradford College AC, 1 December 2014. Retrieved 11 December 2018
  2. "My Yorkshire: Paul Hudson". Yorkshire Post. Johnston Press Digital Publishing. 28 August 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2010.
  3. "Paul Hudson: 'I just knew I wanted to be a weather forecaster. I love it, even after 20 years'". Yorkshire Post. Johnston Press Digital Publishing. 23 August 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  4. Brooke, Chris (12 September 2009). "Weatherman (with a dry sense of humour) put his own village of Wetwang on the map". Daily Mail. London. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  5. Sunshine all the way for Paul and Nicola Telegraph & Argus, 25 July 2003. Retrieved 11 December 2018
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