• 7 hours ago
Janice Forsyth speaks to The Scotsman's Joyce McMillan

BBC Scotland presenter shares devastating diagnosis but vows 'I'm not done yet'

Ms Forsyth quietly stepped down from the show last year. She was not mentioned in a press release announcing a “shake up” of the radio station’s afternoon programming in October, which announced a new arts programme more focused on “celebrity”, hosted by Michelle McManus, who had joined the Afternoon Show’s team to replace Grant Stott in 2022.
BBC Radio Scotland presenter Janice Forsyth has revealed that she has been diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s disease.

The arts and culture presenter, 65, who previously hosted The Afternoon Show, said she had hoped her symptoms were due to exhaustion following the death of her mother, but said she had recently found out she is suffering from the illness.

She said: “Some of you may have noticed that I’ve been absent from your radios for a while, and I feel it’s time now to let everyone know the reason.

“From 2022, I’d been experiencing deep feelings of anxiety and finding some tasks, especially navigation, extremely difficult. I’d hoped that I was simply worn out by my many years as a freelance broadcaster and perhaps exhausted following the loss of our dear Mother, Patricia, the previous Christmas, but sadly, I now have a firm diagnosis of early onset Alzheimer's disease.

“It’s been a huge blow, but I’m also feeling some relief that I finally have an explanation for lapses I’d been experiencing, and I’m managing to remain buoyant most of the time.”

She said she wanted to enjoy the arts for her “own pleasure” and suggested she would not be returning to The Afternoon Show, but said she was still working for The Big Light, the podcast production company she co-founded five years ago with producer Fiona White.

She said: “The company is going from strength to strength, and we're excited for more to come. I’m not done yet!”

Ms Forsyth was the subject of a public campaign to keep her on the airwaves following plans to cut her weekly programme The Janice Forsyth Show in 2013, which had then been running for 18 years.

Celebrities from Edwyn Collins and Alex Kapranos to then-MSP Nicola Sturgeon and author Val McDermid joined the “Keep Jannie on the Trannie” campaign. Following the campaign, the weekday Afternoon Show was launched.

Ms Forsyth said: “So, finding the cause of my trouble took a while, but I at least now know what’s been happening and am grateful for lovely friends and family, as well as for fine post-diagnosis care from NHS Scotland.

“Dear Listener - I never took my role lightly and hope I always gave my best, both for your sake and that of my interviewees. It’s been a blast, and I send a high five to everyone who tuned in on Saturday mornings or on more recent weekday afternoons and heard something interesting.

“For reasons of privacy and mental health, I plan to withdraw from social media for now, and I wish you all well.”

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Transcript
00:00My name is Janice Forsyth. I've been a broadcaster for many, many years. I've had such fun over the
00:05years with what I've been doing. I've so enjoyed it. I absolutely love interviewing people. That's
00:10one of the main things that I've enjoyed over the years. And I've done lots of amazing interviews
00:14actually with all sorts of people, including Chris Christopherson back in the day. And also,
00:21who else have I done? Lots of other people. Oh, David Byrne. David Byrne did an amazing interview
00:25with him. So it's been a joy. I feel very blessed to have met all of those people and done those
00:34interviews. You launched a new podcast company with your colleague Fiona White. That's right.
00:39So it's called The Big Light. And our biggest success with that was our Trumped podcast,
00:45in which we took listeners back to the whole controversy over the Trumped golf courses.
00:52I also really loved the one you did called Old School with the actress Ida Shuster, who became
00:58the UK's oldest podcast. She was over 100. She was amazing. She was 101, actually. It was a joy
01:05to work with her. And that was wonderful because her memories of being part of the sort of Jewish
01:12culture of Glasgow in the early 20th century were fantastic. Yeah, I loved doing that. So we would
01:18go to her house. We would go to meet her and speak to her. And she would say, now, I've got
01:23in food for you. We'd go, no, no, no, we've already had lunch. Don't do any of that. Just an incredible
01:28experience. I think young Cameron, who my colleague who worked on that with me, never forgot it
01:33because she would say, I've just made food. And she was so generous. She was a Jewish mama.
01:38Of course, we're here today, Janice, because you've issued this statement telling the world
01:43and your army of listeners who have always just loved your voice and your presence on the radio,
01:51telling them that you've had this diagnosis of Alzheimer's. And of course, this is a
01:56big shock to everyone. What kind of impact this has had on you and whether there's anything about
02:01it that surprises you or what it has meant to you so far? Well, as you can imagine, I think I said
02:07in the statement, it came as a blow, especially as I'm used to organising things. So
02:14quite a lot of that is slightly beyond me now, and I need help with stuff. But I felt as if
02:21back in the day, I remember doing a talk with some people about the old Saturday morning show.
02:27And these people had dementia. I have Alzheimer's. It's a different thing.
02:32But I remember just thinking quite instinctively, what we're going to do here is get these people
02:37laughing. And they laughed from start to finish with all the crazy stories I was telling them
02:43about the Saturday morning show. So I do think humour, for me, with this, what I now have,
02:50I think it's really, really important. Yeah. And trying to enjoy things. You said something
02:55beautiful in your statement about being able to be in the moment.
02:59Yeah, because I suppose I have been under the, you know, we all know what it's like to be
03:03freelancer. It's a tough gig. And so it's great to be able to sort of like, take a moment.
03:11I've rediscovered my DVD sets, which has been amazing. So I've been ploughing through all my
03:17Alma Dover DVDs and various others. So that's been a joy, actually, to rediscover ye olde DVDs.
03:25And as you said in your statement, to be able to enjoy all these cultural things
03:30without always having to turn them into a show. Yeah, there was always kind of like you were
03:33having the cosh. It's like, you've got to do this now. Yes. Quite literally sometimes.
03:38Yes. With various shows. Well, listen, thank you very much, Janice. That's fantastic.
03:42And we'll be talking a bit more soon. Brilliant. But that's terrific. I've been absolutely thrilled
03:47with all the support I've had from people online. I didn't expect any of that. So it's been amazing.

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