Other Work
Lee currently writes for the MSN gaming column and records monthly podcasts. He is a big Lost fan, and presented Channel 4 radio's UK Lost podcast, where he summarised each episode of series two after it was broadcast in the UK. After Sky acquired rights to air Lost from seasons 3 onwards, Lee was recruited by Sky for their own podcast, entitled The Lost Initiative. For seasons 5 and 6, The Lost Initiative changed from an audio podcast to a "vidcast", with up to three online video discussions a week.
Lee has appeared on BBC Radio 4's Loose Ends. Along with his ex-producer at LBC, "Agent Chris", Lee appeared on "XLeague.tv" discussing videogames.
Lee's voice can be heard as a continuity announcer on the TV channel Dave.
Lee has a free podcast called "Shindiggery", consisting of music, sound bites and audio recordings.
Lee presented the official Big Brother radio show with co-host Gemma Cairney. The programme was called Big Brother's Big Ears and aired twice a week on the Big Brother website.
Lee has performed an experimental work by artists Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard in Sheffield called "Performer. Audience. Fuck Off" - an interpretation of the seminal piece "Performer/Audience/Mirror" originally presented in 1975 by American artist Dan Graham
Lee regularly appears on ITV's This Morning discussing a range of topical news stories, and occasionally on Sky News reviewing newspapers.
Read more about this topic: Iain Lee
Famous quotes containing the word work:
“They that goe downe to th sea in ships:
Their busines there to doo
In waters great. The Lords work see,
Ith deep his wonders too.”
—Bible: Hebrew Psalm CVII (Bay Psalm Book)
“How marvellous it all is! Built not by saints and angels, but the work of mens hands; cemented with mens honest blood and with a world of tears, welded by the best brains of centuries past; not without the taint and reproach incidental to all human work, but constructed on the whole with pure and splendid purpose. Human, and yet not wholly humanfor the most heedless and the most cynical must see the finger of the Divine.”
—Archibald Philip Primrose, 5th Earl Rosebery (18471929)