Syd Burke | |
---|---|
Born | Edmund Burke 1938 Jamaica |
Died | 30 July 2010 (aged 72)
London, England |
Nationality | British |
Education | Cornwall College; Excelsior High School; North London Polytechnic |
Occupation(s) | Broadcaster, photographer and journalist |
Known for | Radio programme Rice 'n' Peas |
Relatives | Aggrey Burke (brother) |
Edmund Burke (1938 – 30 July 2010), known as Syd Burke, was a broadcaster, photographer and journalist, who moved to the UK from Jamaica to study photography in 1960, after having studied engineering, and later hosted London Broadcasting Corporation's (LBC) Rice 'n' Peas, a popular magazine programme.
He was the brother of psychiatrist and academic Aggrey Burke.
Burke was born in Jamaica, the eldest of six children. [1] [2] He first attended Cornwall College in Montego Bay, and then Excelsior High School, where he was head boy. [2]
He moved to the UK in 1960 to study photography at the North London Polytechnic, after having studied engineering in Jamaica. [2] Burke was soon working as a professional photographer, while also starting a career as a broadcaster. [3] [4] During the 1970s and 1980s he became well known in the UK as one of the first black journalists and the host of London Broadcasting Corporation's (LBC) Rice 'n' Peas, a popular magazine programme, which he presented for seven years, and which he described was from "a black point of view". [5] [6] [7]
Burke's contribution to community programming is sometimes cited alongside that of Mike Phillips and Alex Pascall, who presented BBC Radio London's Black Londoners. [8] [9] Burke also wrote as a journalist. [10]
Following a career at LBC, he ran a training programme for young broadcasters. [2]
In late January 1983 Burke joined the newly established independent television network Channel 4 as a continuity announcer. [11] Other television work that Burke was involved with in the 1980s included appearing on BBC Two's programme Ebony, reviewing the British press. [12] [13]
A photograph by Burke appeared in the catalogue of the 1997 exhibition Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 – 1996. [14]
He was a recipient of a Hansib award. [15]
Burke married Veronica and they had three sons. [16] One of his younger brothers is psychiatrist and specialist in transcultural psychiatry Aggrey Burke. [2]
On 30 July 2010, Burke died of cancer of the colon at the Charing Cross Hospital, Hammersmith. [16]
Syd Burke | |
---|---|
Born | Edmund Burke 1938 Jamaica |
Died | 30 July 2010 (aged 72)
London, England |
Nationality | British |
Education | Cornwall College; Excelsior High School; North London Polytechnic |
Occupation(s) | Broadcaster, photographer and journalist |
Known for | Radio programme Rice 'n' Peas |
Relatives | Aggrey Burke (brother) |
Edmund Burke (1938 – 30 July 2010), known as Syd Burke, was a broadcaster, photographer and journalist, who moved to the UK from Jamaica to study photography in 1960, after having studied engineering, and later hosted London Broadcasting Corporation's (LBC) Rice 'n' Peas, a popular magazine programme.
He was the brother of psychiatrist and academic Aggrey Burke.
Burke was born in Jamaica, the eldest of six children. [1] [2] He first attended Cornwall College in Montego Bay, and then Excelsior High School, where he was head boy. [2]
He moved to the UK in 1960 to study photography at the North London Polytechnic, after having studied engineering in Jamaica. [2] Burke was soon working as a professional photographer, while also starting a career as a broadcaster. [3] [4] During the 1970s and 1980s he became well known in the UK as one of the first black journalists and the host of London Broadcasting Corporation's (LBC) Rice 'n' Peas, a popular magazine programme, which he presented for seven years, and which he described was from "a black point of view". [5] [6] [7]
Burke's contribution to community programming is sometimes cited alongside that of Mike Phillips and Alex Pascall, who presented BBC Radio London's Black Londoners. [8] [9] Burke also wrote as a journalist. [10]
Following a career at LBC, he ran a training programme for young broadcasters. [2]
In late January 1983 Burke joined the newly established independent television network Channel 4 as a continuity announcer. [11] Other television work that Burke was involved with in the 1980s included appearing on BBC Two's programme Ebony, reviewing the British press. [12] [13]
A photograph by Burke appeared in the catalogue of the 1997 exhibition Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 – 1996. [14]
He was a recipient of a Hansib award. [15]
Burke married Veronica and they had three sons. [16] One of his younger brothers is psychiatrist and specialist in transcultural psychiatry Aggrey Burke. [2]
On 30 July 2010, Burke died of cancer of the colon at the Charing Cross Hospital, Hammersmith. [16]