- Paul Coia
Paul Coia (born June 19, 1955, Glasgow) is a Scottish television presenter and continuity announcer who was the first voice on Channel 4. Coia was schooled at St Aloysius' College in Glasgow and then at the University of Glasgow before going into hospital radio and eventually getting a job as a disc jockey at Radio Clyde. In the early 1980s he also worked as a continuity announcer for Scottish Television and when he joined Channel 4 on it's launch, …
- Julian Simmons
Julian Simmons is a Northern Irish television presenter, who is best known as a continuity announcer on UTV. Julian has worked at the station since 1984. He usually introduces the programmes in-vision, rather than providing a voiceover over an ident, making UTV the only ITV region to still use in-vision continuity. In addition to announcing the following programmes, he also introduces competitions under the "Watch to Win" banner.
- Neil Nunes
Neil Nunes is a continuity announcer on BBC Radio 4 and the BBC World Service. He began working on Radio 4 in a freelance capacity in 2006 and was initially criticised for his Caribbean accent. He was defended on the programme "Feedback".
- Alice Arnold
Alice Arnold is a newsreader and continuity announcer on BBC Radio 4. After gaining a degree in politics, she trained as an actress and was a magistrate for ten years. She joined the BBC Radio Drama Company in 1988. After meeting Peter Donaldson at a party in 1994, she joined Radio 4 in that year. In 2004 she became a newsreader, and now regularly reads the afternoon and evening news on Radio 4. In June 2006 she was promoted to read the news on the Today programme.
- David Miles
David Miles is a British continuity announcer and newsreader on BBC Radio 4. Born in 1954, he joined the BBC in 1975 as a studio manager. Initially working at Bush House, he soon transferred to Broadcasting House. Between 1981 and 1987 he worked as a BBC Television announcer, followed by a spell on Channel 4 before returning to BBC TV in 1988. He returned for a short spell on Channel 4 in 1995, …
- Peter Jefferson
Peter Jefferson is a BBC Radio 4 continuity announcer. He joined the BBC as a Studio Manager in 1968, and was the station's senior announcer until his retirement in 2001. In May 2005 he stood in as a newsreader during strike action by other staff. He is often dubbed "Voice of the Shipping Forecast". He is also the reader of quotations in some episodes of the Radio 4 quiz game "Quote, Unquote".
- Frank Mitchell
Frank Mitchell (born 24 July 1965 in Burren, County Down) is a Northern Irish broadcaster and journalist. He is currently a presenter, weather presenter and reporter for UTV Live, the main news programme on UTV in Northern Ireland.. He is also a presenter on the UTV-owned radio station U105. Frank began his broadcasting career in the early 1980s at the small but popular radio station "Carousel" in Dundalk, in the Republic of Ireland.
- Kathy Clugston
Kathy Clugston is a newsreader and continuity announcer on BBC Radio 4 and the BBC World Service. She began working on Radio 4 in 2006, and first read the evening news shift in 2007.
- Trish Bertram
Trish Bertram is a British television continuity announcer. She has been a live tv announcer for nearly 25 years and is well known for her work with London Weekend Television for over twenty years. Alongside colleague Glen Thompsett, she was one of the final announcers as LWT came to its last closedown, at the point when the English ITV regions united into a single ITV1 network in October 2002.
- Glen Thompsett
Glen Thompsett is a British television presenter, radio presenter, voiceover artist and continuity announcer. Glen's career has included working in Radio with British Independent Local Radio stations Severn Sound, GWR (Wiltshire), Mercia Sound and Invicta FM. Glen was hosting the breakfast show during his time at Invicta FM during the late 80’s and early 90’s gaining some of the highest audience figures in the station’s history.
- Gillian Porter
Gillian Porter (b. 13 April, 1965, County Londonderry) is a Northern Irish television presenter. She is best known as a continuity announcer and newsreader at UTV, where she has appeared since 1993. Gillian provides voiceovers for UTV programme trailers and local advertisements. Before joining UTV in 1992, Gillian briefly worked as a continuity announcer and director at BBC Northern Ireland.
- Aidan Browne
Aidan Browne is a Northern Irish television presenter and actor. He is best known as a continuity announcer and news presenter at UTV, where he has appeared since 1993. He also provides voiceovers for UTV programme trailers and local advertisements. As well as his announcing role, Aidan is also a lecturer in Performing Arts at the Belfast Institute of Further and Higher Education.
- Carrot Top
Carrot Top, born Scott Thompson on February 25, 1965 (though he has claimed in interviews to be born in 1967 and 1969) in Los Angeles, California is an American prop comedian famous for his red hair. According to his official site Carrot Top spends fifteen weeks a year doing live performances in Las Vegas (currently performing at the Luxor Hotel) and does over 100 shows a year on tour. His comedy routine is most known for his comedic use of props.
- Gary Terzza
Gary Terzza is a British television announcer whose most commonly known for his continuity announcing for Channel 4. Gary has previously worked on radio, and can be remembered for being one of the faces on Children's ITV between 1987 and 1988. He worked for Central Independent Television from its launch in 1982 as an in-vision continuity announcer before joining Channel 4 in 1991.
- Audra Thomas
Audra Thomas (formerly Audra Cunningham) is a Northern Irish television presenter. She is best known as a continuity announcer and newsreader at UTV, where he has appeared since around 1997. Audra also provides voiceovers for UTV programme trailers and local advertisements. In 2003, Audra became the main presenter of "Pick of the Day", a two-minute programme looking ahead to highlights of the following day's schedule on UTV.
- Alan Dedicoat
Alan "Deadly" Dedicoat (born 1954, in Hollywood in Worcestershire) is a senior British continuity announcer for BBC television who is also a newsreader on BBC Radio 2 and is the head of the station's newsreading team. He is perhaps best known as the "Voice of the Balls" on the National Lottery programme on BBC One. He is also a regular on Radio 2's breakfast programme, "Wake Up to Wogan". He was educated at King Edward VI Camp Hill for Boys in Birmingham, …
- Rose Neill
Rose Neill is a Northern Irish television newscaster, who is currently an anchor and presenter for BBC Newsline. She was educated at The Mount School, York in England, and at the City and East London College where she studied Optics. Rose began her broadcasting career in 1977 for Ulster Television as a children's television presenter, and later moved to a role as a newscaster and continuity announcer at the station.
- Martin King
Martin King is a British actor, voice actor and former continuity announcer. His television credits include "Dixon of Dock Green" (1961), "Crossroads" (1964), "Detective" (1968) and "The Troubleshooters" (1969). He also appeared in the "Doctor Who" serial "The Power of the Daleks" in 1966. King is associated with the productions of Gerry Anderson, …
- Andy Crane
Andy Crane (born February 24 1964) (real name Howard Craine) is a English television and radio host, best known for his stint in the Children's BBC "The Broom Cupboard" in the 1980s. Crane shot to fame when he took over from Phillip Schofield as the onscreen continuity announcer during the late afternoon children's programming on the BBC in 1987.
- Ivor Roberts
Ivor Roberts (19 July 1925 - 5 September 1999) was a British television continuity announcer and television actor who often appeared in comedic roles. Born in Nottingham, England, Roberts started his television career as a continuity announcer on regional television in Wales, working for TWW before that company lost its franchise in 1968. Among his better-known roles were the characters of Arnold Thomas in the 1995-97 television series "Oh, …
- Peter Griffin
Peter Griffin is a journalist and voiceover artist. He is mainly seen on ITV Westcountry fronting regional news bulletins and presenting the weather. He began work in southwest England at the then newly created Westcountry Television in January 1993 as a continuity announcer, but left when ITV's presentation in England was transferred to London in October 2002.
- Christopher Robbie
Christopher Robbie is a British actor, television announcer, theatre director and designer, playwright and photographer. He trained as an actor at RADA in London, and has had a distinguished theatrical career, playing the title role in King Lear when a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company. He has also performed a one-man play about the life of Charles Darwin. Under the pseudonym James Alan he wrote the play "The Sirens of Eroc".
- Sue Robbie
Sue Robbie (b. Susan Robinson on July 5, 1949, London) grew up in the north-west of England and was educated at Keele University, where she read English and Psychology. Before working in television, she was a schoolteacher and an air hostess. She was a continuity announcer for Granada Television in the late-1970s and early-1980s and frequently appeared with fellow Granada announcer Charles Foster.
- Mark Dailey
Mark Dailey is an American-born Canadian television journalist and announcer. He is the co-anchor of CITY's 11 p.m. weeknight "CityNews" newscasts in Toronto, Ontario, and a prominent continuity announcer voicing interstitial program announcements on Citytv and CP24. His work for City's local news specialty service CP24 included hosting a talk show, "Dailey Live Nightly", in that channel's early days. Dailey was born and raised in Youngstown, Ohio, …
- Kerrie Gosney
Kerrie Gosney is a British weather presenter for ITV regions Yorkshire, Granada, Border, and occasionally Tyne Tees. Prior to weather forecasting, Kerrie was a continuity announcer for the forementioned ITV stations before continuity moved to London in 2002.
- Michael Henderson
Michael "Hendi" Henderson is a Northern Irish broadcaster. He is possibly best known for his voiceover work on UTV and his weekly radio programme on Belfast-based radio station U105. Michael began his broadcasting days in the mid 1970s, and became an earlier presenter on the fledgling Downtown Radio under the nickname "Hendi". In subsequent years, he has also worked as a stand-in presenter on BBC Radio Ulster.
- Scottie McClue
Scottie McClue (real name Colin Lamont) is a British radio presenter, sometimes referred to as a shock jock. Lamont was a continuity announcer at Border Television. He has presented "Scottie McClue's Mega Phone-In" on a wide range of independent local radio stations, including Hallam FM. In mid-April 1998, his show was syndicated across the Magic Radio stations owned by EMAP in Liverpool, Yorkshire and North East England.
- Jacqueline Joubert
Jacqueline Joubert, born "Jacqueline Annette Édith Pierre" (March 29, 1921 in Paris - January 8, 2005 in Neuilly-sur-Seine) was a presenter on French national television. She was one of the first two announcers (with Arlette Accart) when television began in France after the Second World War. She was married to the journalist George de Caunes, was the mother of Canal+ TV star Antoine de Caunes, and the grandmother of the actress Emma de Caunes.
- John Myers
John Myers (aka John Morgan) is a British radio executive and presenter. He is currently the chief executive of GMG Radio, owned by the Scott Trust, which owns the Smooth FM and Real Radio brands. He began as a presenter in 1982 for Red Rose, and then Radio Tees in 1984. In 1988 he became the programme controller and breakfast presenter for Red Rose Gold.
- Ruth Langsford
Ruth Langsford is a British television presenter, born in Singapore. She began her career as a continuity announcer and newscaster with ITV regional station TSW in the South West of England. She left TSW when Westcountry Television took over the franchise on 1 January 1993, even closing down the station with fellow announcer, the late Ian Sterling. Since then she has presented such programmes as "Loose Women", …
- Jim Lee
Jim Lee is a freelance continuity announcer on BBC Radio 4 and a newsreader and announcer at the BBC World Service. He was born in Nuneaton, England and joined the BBC in 1989. In the early 1990s he was involved in trials of DAB (Digital Audio Broadcasting - i.e. Digital Radio), but was made redundant in 1997. Shortly after he re-joined as a freelance continuity announcer on Radio 4 and the World Service, and joined BBC7 in 2002.
- Mike Prince
Mike Prince (born 1944) is a former continuity announcer for ATV and Central Independent Television in the United Kingdom. He joined ATV in the Midlands around 1966 and stayed with Central until the 1990s, also announcing at times for HTV Wales, HTV West, Thames Television and Southern Television. He was particularly noted for his smooth, unflappable onscreen presence, and was heard throughout the ITV network voicing trailers for ATV and Central programmes.
- Mary Kennedy
Mary Kennedy is an Irish television personality. Mary Kennedy was born in Clondalkin, Dublin. She was educated at Colaiste Bride in Clondalkin and University College Dublin where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts. She taught English in Brittany, France before returning to her alma mater to teach Irish and French. Kennedy's broadcasting career started in 1978 when she applied for a job as continuity announcer in RTÉ. She went on to join the RTÉ News team, …
- Brian Nissen
Brian Nissen (born October 20, 1927 in London, died February 8, 2001) was a British actor and television continuity announcer. He made an early appearance in Laurence Olivier's film of Shakespeare's "Henry V", and made many TV, film and stage appearances, including "The New Adventures of Charlie Chan" and "Sword of Freedom" in 1957. However, he is probably best-remembered as an in-vision announcer for Southern Television, …
- Jim Pope
Jim Pope (1933 - November 2001) was a British radio and television continuity announcer. He began his career in radio and moved to TV to deliver continuity links for HTV in the 1960s and early 1970s. He then moved to Granada TV where he remained for the rest of his career. He provided in-vision and out of vision continuity announcements for them. His most well known contemporaries were Charles Foster and Colin Weston.
- Tina Campbell
Tina Campbell is a Northern Irish television presenter and journalist, who is currently a presenter and reporter for UTV Live. Tina, a former student of journalism at the Belfast Institute of Further and Higher Education, was a former reporter and newsreader for Downtown Radio in her teens. She also worked at BBC Radio Ulster as a Traffic and Travel presenter. Tina started off at UTV as a continuity announcer in 1994, a role she retained for around three years.
- Robin Taylor
Robin Taylor is a Northern Irish television presenter. He is best known as a continuity announcer and newsreader at UTV, where he has appeared since 1993. Like his colleague Julian Simmons, Robin can sometimes be seen announcing in-vision. Robin also presents weather forecasts in-vision at weekends, and he also provides voiceovers for UTV programme trailers and local advertisements. As well as his announcing role, Robin is also a physics teacher at Campbell College, Belfast.
- Philip Elsmore
Philip Elsmore (born June 12, 1937 in Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire) is most famous as a continuity announcer on Thames Television between its inception in 1968 and the station's demise in 1992, having made both the first and last continuity announcements for the station. He previously announced on ABC UK, which was the main influence on what became Thames, and he announced for Southern Television at weekends while London Weekend Television was on air in London.
- Caroline Feraday
- Juha Ahonen