Nick Ross
Nick Ross was born in London on 7 August 1947, went to Wallington County Grammar School, then read psychology at Queen's University Belfast. The Nobel-laureate Seamus Heaney was among his teachers and the youngest MP Bernadette Devlin was among his contemporaries. He graduated with a BA (Hons) and later became a Doctor of the University (honoris causa).
He moved into journalism through his involvement in politics. He won the largest popular vote in the student union's history, and became a member of the students' union executive at a time when tensions were building in the province and the student movement was at the centre of events. He was deputy president of the union when the troubles broke out in earnest, and remained in Northern Ireland for seven years. He was among the first to conduct academic research into the troubles in Northern Ireland, investigating prejudice among school children, and showed that for practical purposes - and contrary to a widely held assumption in the Province - even in the most sectarian communities people cannot tell Catholics from Protestants just by looking. He became involved in broadcasting more or less by chance, while still a student. His first appearance, like most of those that followed, was live. He reported regularly on the troubles for BBC Northern Ireland, with news and documentaries (as well as a chat show), and witnessed much of the bloodshed and political turmoil when the violence was at its height. He intended to return to academics until tempted by offers of broadcasting work in London. He has been a freelance ever since. He has been a leading broadcaster across a wide range of issues, specializing at various times in news, current affairs, politics, and crime, with several forays into lighter fields including chat shows and quizzes. Nick has gained a reputation as one of the best conference moderators and chairs meetings for companies and government agencies around the world. Many of his energies are devoted to voluntary activities, mostly in the fields of healthcare, community safety, and public understanding of science. Nick also holds many appointments - he is the chairman of UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science, Director and Trustee of UK Stem Cell Foundation, a fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine and Royal Society of Arts, ambassador of the World Wildlife Fund to name just a few. He is married to head of features at ITV, Sarah Caplin, and has three sons.
What he presents:
Crime Prevention and Security
Health and Bioethics
Science
Fire Prevention
Environment
Road Safety
Northern Ireland
Broadcasting