
BBC Radio Scotland presenter takes break for cancer treatment
BBC Radio Scotland broadcaster Bryan Burnett has announced that he will be taking a break from his programme to undergo treatment for a rare cancer.Burnett, 59, who presents the early evening Get it On show told listeners he was diagnosed with appendiceal cancer after having his appendix removed earlier this year.He said the cancer, while "incredibly rare", is treatable and he is expected to make a full recovery after treatment which will involve complex abdominal surgery and chemotherapy.Presenter Grant Stott will fill in while Burnett recovers.
Get it On is a popular evening show which airs on BBC Radio Scotland from 18:00 on weekdays.It plays requests from listeners which match a theme set each show.Previously, Burnett presented Brand New Country, a country music show on BBC Radio Scotland for 15 years and has had stints on Radio Clyde and Northsound.
Surgeon is a Get it On listener
"I've experienced the most incredible care and kindness from the NHS staff who have been looking after me. My surgeon is a Get it On listener so I know I'm in good hands," he said."I will really miss the music and the chat when I'm off but our listeners have given me hundreds of great playlists so that will keep me going over the next few months."He delivered the news to his listeners directly in an emotional announcement during his live show on Thursday evening."I want to take this opportunity to say a massive thank you to all my brilliant producers for all the hand holding and all the encouragement they've given me since they found out my news," he said. "I'm sure they'll let you know how I'm doing over the next few weeks". Hayley Valentine, director BBC Scotland said: "Bryan is one of our most popular broadcasters on Radio Scotland and I know listeners will join us in wishing him well as he embarks on his treatment."We look forward to welcoming him back to the Get it On studio once he's recovered."
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Telegraph
43 minutes ago
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I keep thinking the grievances will end soon. Surely there's no more to come out? Surely we've heard it all by now – in books, in the Netflix series, and in multiple television interviews. But hark, what's this? Another revelation from Montecito. Prince Harry, at one stage of the fallout, apparently discussed changing his name and becoming a Spencer. He talked to his uncle about it, but Charles Spencer counselled against the move, before Harry was advised that the legal issues would be insurmountable. It's a rare moment, these days, that I feel sympathy and kinship with the runaway prince, but I do share some of his anxieties here. In recent years, I've increasingly wondered whether I should start writing under a different name. Not, admittedly, because I've fallen out with my family, moved continents, and now spend my days flying around the globe warning others about global warming. No, my name simply seems to wind up so many people, cause strangers to make so many assumptions about me, and spark such internet grief, that I wonder whether life would be easier if I was something else. Unlike Harry's uncle, my father advised me to change my name when I was starting out. But I was too young, arrogant and determined to listen, and this was 20 or so years ago, when class warfare hadn't quite reached the fever pitch that it has now. I ignored him and have carried on ever since. It's character-building, I've always insisted, through the barbs. Although, last year I was particularly miffed when the best-selling author Kevin Kwan, the writer of Crazy Rich Asians, stuck an airhead journalist called Cosima Money-Coutts in his latest novel. The book had the usual legal disclaimer in the front ('any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental'), but I couldn't help feel that this was a reasonably close resemblance, given that 'Cosima' worked for a posh magazine and I used to work for Tatler. Still, I'll get my own back. I'll name an irritating little berk 'Kevin' in my next book, or maybe an especially yappy dog. So I've stuck with my name, because it is memorable, even if it winds people up. And if I changed it I'd feel fraudulent, like I was running away from something. Now poor Dennis the terrier has been lumbered with the same. When we visit the vet after yet another pavement chicken bone has become lodged inside him, the receptionist says loudly, 'Dennis Money-Coutts?', and there comes the odd titter in the waiting room. It's character-building, I remind him in the car home. If you stopped the average person in the street, I'm not sure they'd know what Prince Harry's surname actually was. Windsor? Mountbatten-Windsor? Wales? He went by Wales at school and for a spell afterwards, I know, because a friend had an excruciating run-in with him over exactly this. It was a shooting weekend, and various 20-something posh boys were joshing one another drunkenly after dinner. 'Wales! Wales!' they kept calling Harry, so my friend, who knew the group less well, decided he could call him that too. 'Wales!' he cried across the table, only for Prince Harry to look up sharply and wag his finger at him. My friend had overstepped the mark – too familiar. A touch of the Prince Andrews about that exchange, I've always felt. If it's a disguise he's after, it's his first name he should worry about. That's the one we really know. How about Prince Larry? Prince Barry? Prince Gary? But it was Spencer he wanted, with one rumour suggesting this was because his wife was particularly keen. I'm not sure how many of you found time to watch it, but in Meghan's most recent television series, she talks determinedly of being Sussex. 'It's so funny you keep saying 'Meghan Markle,'' she admonishes a friend, while demonstrating how to make a sandwich, although she doesn't sound like she finds it very funny at all; 'You know I'm Sussex now.' Except 'Spencer' would bring her closer to Diana, says a source, which is what she really wants. A friend of mine who is a Spencer (no relation to Charles) says her American colleagues constantly ask whether she's related to Diana, so perhaps the idea that this is what people would assume isn't as far-fetched as it sounds. Although, my friend is half-Korean, so I love the idea that her colleagues are trying to work her into the Althorp family tree. Unfortunately, the change would also make Harry and Meghan's daughter Lilibet Diana Spencer, and is that a good name to saddle a small girl with? I'm also just not sure Meghan would want to be plain old Meghan Spencer. What, no dukedom? The trouble is, for Harry, that while he may want to change his name, it wouldn't change who he is. Symbolic, yes, and another potential wedge driven between him and his father and brother. Maybe, for a spell, it would make him feel angry relief at putting another bollard between them. Not content with moving 5,000 miles away, he'll cast off their name, too. More and more Shakespearean by the day. 'Presume not that I am the thing I was,' and all that. But just as I'd be the same, writing the same jokes about dogs and posh matters, albeit in disguise as Sophie Cash-Natwest (or something terrifically cryptic like that), so would he. Prince Harry, or Harry Spencer, once the boy that everyone had such a soft spot for; now, still, so furious at everyone's behaviour but his own. More grown-up, more sensible to stick with what you have already, Harry. That's what I always tell myself, anyway.