Matt Morgan (comedian)

Matthew Morgan is a British comedy writer and radio presenter. He is best known for his work with Russell Brand, with whom he shared numerous writing credits, as well as co-hosting The Russell Brand Show on BBC Radio 2, BBC 6 Music and Radio X.

Matt Morgan
Birth nameMatthew Morgan
MediumTelevision, radio
NationalityBritish
Years active2002–
Notable works and rolesThe Russell Brand Show

Career

Writing

Morgan met Russell Brand when he was working as an intern on MTV.[1] He first joined with Brand after the presenter told him he had a television show idea which was "good" and "commissioned", and that Morgan should work on it with him; Morgan later joked that neither of those things turned out to be true.[2]

Radio

Morgan was the co-host of The Russell Brand Show from its initial conception in 2006 on BBC Radio 2 until its finish following Brand's resignation due to the prank telephone calls row. On the radio show, Morgan played the straight man to Brand's cheeky chappy persona, often mimicking Brand's accent and singing. In his memoir, Booky Wook 2, Brand asserted that he and Morgan got into a row following Brand's controversial turn as the host of the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards (which the men co-wrote), and Morgan refused to return to the show.[3][4]

When Brand returned to talk radio in the Autumn of 2010, Morgan rejoined The Russell Brand Show.[5]

From 8 to 22 August 2021, Morgan along with Noel Gallagher presented "The Radio X Residency" every Sunday on Radio X.[6]

In September 2023, a recording resurfaced from The Russell Brand Show in 2008, of Morgan and Russell Brand discussing an incident in which Brand had allegedly exposed himself to a women in a bathroom in Los Angeles. In the broadcast Morgan states “It's been 25 minutes since he [Brand] showed his willy to a lady”, Morgan later commented on the incident via his lawyer that he was "not aware until now of the nature of this encounter".[7]

Credits

Writing credits

Presenting

  • Russell Brand on the Road[9]

Other roles

References

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