Tony Blackburn hijacks BBC Radio 2 show to mark 60 years of pirate radio
The DJ, 81, worked on pirate stations Radio Caroline and Radio London in the 1960s.

Veteran DJ Tony Blackburn hijacked The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 2 in a stunt celebrating the 60th anniversary of the UKās first pirate radio station.
Radio Caroline was a British radio station that began regular broadcasting on March 28 1964 from a ship anchored off the coast of Felixstowe in Suffolk.
In the 1960s, Blackburn, 81, who presents Sounds Of The 60s and Tony Blackburnās Golden Hour on Radio 2, worked on the pirate radio stations Radio Caroline and Radio London.
On Thursday morning, Blackburn took over Ballās Radio 2 show and played Caroline by The Fortunes, which he used to play as a DJ on Radio Caroline.
He said: āThe pirates are back. Zoe Ball has been locked out of the studio. Iām here. Anarchy once again.
āWe are pirates. Weāre pirate Radio 2 and here we go.
āFor the next hour, Iām gonna play you proper music.ā
I understand that Radio 5 Live is celebrating 30 years. We laugh at them. We actually laugh at Radio 5 celebrating 30 years for goodness sake. Unbelievable
Later on Blackburn said that he and fellow radio presenter Johnnie Walker had been āthinking aboutā hijacking the radio station for a while.
āUnfortunately, Johnnie Walker has overslept and heās having a lie-in, but itās one of those thingsā, he said.
On Friday, Blackburn will co-host Clash Of The Pirates with Walker and the two veteran pirate broadcasters will āmusically battle and banter to become ācaptain of the pirates'ā in a programme celebrating the 60th anniversary.
Later on in his takeover, Blackburn laughed at Radio 5 Liveās 30-year celebrations.
āWe are here. At last, after 60 yearsā, he said.
āI understand that Radio 5 Live is celebrating 30 years.
āWe laugh at them. We actually laugh at Radio 5 celebrating 30 years for goodness sake. Unbelievable.ā
After Blackburn played a variety of songs from the 1960s, he was joined by Ball who joked she had freed herself from the tape and got out from the cupboard she was locked in.
āIām loving this pirate takeoverā, she said.
āCongratulations, itās 60 years.ā
Blackburn said: āI started on Radio Caroline in July actually, 1964.ā
āI remember seeing the pirate ship, the Mi Amigo, for the very first timeā, he said.
āWe went out from Harwich (Essex), we sailed over from Harwich and it was quite a choppy day and I saw this little pirate ship giving the government so much trouble and I thought āwow, thatās greatā.ā
He continued: āEverybody remembers Radio Caroline, I particularly loved āBig Lā Radio London and that was a bigger ship and we had our own cabins and everything.
āBut we all got on well out there. It was three years ā¦ I just thought it was wonderful.ā
Pirate stations beamed music from ships outside British territorial waters and became popular as they reflected changing attitudes towards music at a time when the BBC ruled the waves.
They were unlicensed and did not observe copyright law and in August 1967, a new Act of Parliament called the Marine, & Broadcasting (Offences) Act came in to effect in a bid to silence these offshore radio stations.
In the aftermath of the Act, Blackburn became the first DJ on BBC Radio 1 when it launched in September 1967.