Marc Haynes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Marc Haynes

(1976-04-05) 5 April 1976 (age 49)
Yearsactive1997–present
Marc Haynes
Haynes in 2024
Born
Marc Haynes

(1976-04-05) 5 April 1976 (age 49)
Comedy career
Years active1997–present
MediumTelevision, radio, podcasting

Marc Haynes (born 5 April 1976)[1][2] is an English comedy writer, radio broadcaster and podcaster.

Marc Haynes was brought up in London and won the 1998 edition of the Daily Telegraph Open Mic Award for stand-up comedy,[3] the finals of which also featured Stephen Merchant and Dan Antopolski.

Radio

From 2004 to 2007, he worked with Richard Bacon on his XFM and Capital Radio shows. From 2007 to 2008, he worked with Alex Zane on the XFM breakfast show, before starting a weekly show and podcast called "Certificate X." Since 2010, he has hosted regular shows on BBC 6 Music with Bacon.

Writing

He is a regular writer on the ITV comedy shows Celebrity Juice and Richard Bacon's Beer and Pizza Club.[4]

His radio credits include two series of the sitcom Clement Doesn't Live Here Anymore on BBC Radio 4 and co-writing a one-off comedy for BBC Radio 4 with Danny Wallace called New World Order.

In November 2008, his piece entitled "Fifty Years Of Popular Song Condensed Into A Single Sentence" was published by McSweeneys.

Podcasts

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI