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Amol Rajan on viral remix moment: Social media can be kind

The presenter and journalist, 40, was sampled for music following a question on University Challenge.

Charlotte McLaughlin
Saturday 13 January 2024 08:49 EST
University Challengeā€™s Amol Rajan went viral on social media for his response to a question on the show (Lifted Entertainment/ Ric Lowe)
University Challengeā€™s Amol Rajan went viral on social media for his response to a question on the show (Lifted Entertainment/ Ric Lowe)

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Amol Rajan has said that social media can have ā€œkindness and creativity rather than conspiracy and contemptā€ after going viral for a moment on University Challenge.

The presenter and journalist, 40, was sampled for music following a question on the popular BBC quiz.

During a Monday episode, Rajan asked: ā€œWhat name is given to the genre of dance music that developed in the UK in the early 1990s out of the rave scene and reggae sound system culture associated with acts such as A Guy Called Gerald and Goldie?ā€

When the team from the University of Aberdeen team got the answer wrong, he replied saying: ā€œI canā€™t accept Drum and Bass. We need Jungle, Iā€™m afraidā€.

Bath Spa University researcher, Nathan Filer, then posted on X, formerly Twitter, encouraging people to ā€œsampleā€ Rajanā€™s response, which is when it took off.

According to Rajan, his answer led to him being invited to play at festivals, being played on BBC Radio 1, ā€œacquire a cult following in the jungle sceneā€ and even a response from Goldie who said he would look at sampling the sentence.

The music form, Jungle, came to popularity in the 1990s and blends reggae and hip hop with dance music and is seen as the forefather to drum and bass.

In a BBC blog, Rajan wrote: ā€œFor six years, as media editor for BBC News, I reported on the threat social media posed to Western civilisation. Doubtless, it is profound, and my recent experience of Twitter/X has been dreadful.

ā€œBut then I work in the media, at the BBC, and cover politics, in an era of toxic culture wars.

ā€œThis week reminded me of the original vision of social media, which was more social and less media.

ā€œThose of us in my trade should remember it can generate communities and pullulate with kindness and creativity rather than conspiracy and contempt.ā€

Rajan, also a presenter on BBC Radio 4ā€™s Today programme, said with four children, he does not have time for rave in the same way but the post allowed him to reconnect with his ā€œyounger selfā€.

He also wrote: ā€œI can confirm, however, that jungle is massive. I note Filer has updated his profile to say: ā€˜Unexpected player in a junglist revivalā€™. Me too, boss, and Iā€™m grateful for the precision with which you used the term. Because I canā€™t accept drum ā€˜nā€™ bass.

ā€œWe need jungle, Iā€™m afraid.ā€

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