Its Not What You Think
By (Author) Chris Evans
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
1st July 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Radio / podcasts
Television
791.44092
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 23mm
270g
The story of how one council estate lad made good, really very good, and survived just about to tell the tale
Chris Evanss extraordinary career has seen him become one of the countrys most successful broadcasters and producers. From The Big Breakfast to Dont Forget Your Toothbrush and TFI Friday, Chris changed the TV landscape during the 90s; and on Manchesters Piccadilly Radio, BBC Radio 1s Breakfast show and as owner of Virgin Radio he ushered in the age of the celebrity DJ.
But this is only part of the Chris Evans story. In this witty and energetically written autobiography, Chris describes the experiences that shaped the boy and created the man who would go on to carve out such a dazzlingly brilliant career. Born on a dreary council estate in Warrington and determined to escape, Chris started out as the best newspaper boy on the block, armed with no more than a little silver Binatone radio that he would take to the newsagents each day and through which he would develop a life-long and passionate love affair with the music and voices that emerged.
From paperboy to media mogul, Its Not What You Think isnt what you think - its the real story beyond the glare of the media spotlight from one of this countrys brightest and boldest personalities.
An eye-opening read, OK Magazine
It is as an autobiographer that Chris Evans finally seems to have grown up, The Observer
Full to the brim with fantastic anecdotes, Heat
A critic confounding mea culpa of a memoir, The Guardian
The guy can spin a yarn as long as long as the M1 and as colourful as his hair, Now Magazine
Chris Evans began his broadcasting career at Manchesters Piccadilly Radio, going on to become a household name in TV and radio. He launched and presented the hugely successful Channel 4 shows The Big Breakfast, Dont Forget Your Toothbrush and TFI Friday, before moving to radio in 1996. Chris joined BBC Radio 2 in 2005 and soon succeeded Sir Terry Wogan as host of the Breakfast Show. Before long he had exceeded Wogans listening figures, and the nation had begun to accept the reformed wild child back into its heart.Chriss second book, Memoirs of a Fruitcake, became a Sunday Times bestseller and was named Sunday Times Book of the Year in 2011. Encouraged by this success he now pens a hugely popular weekly column in the Daily Mail, as well as running 500 Words, a short story competition for children.Chriss wild days are now firmly behind him, and he lives with his wife Natasha and sons Noah and Eli in the Berkshire countryside.