Lindsay Gilbert Yeo (1946 – 12 November 2024) was a New Zealand radio broadcaster. He was best known for hosting the 2ZB breakfast show in Wellington between 1972 and 1995, and for his creation of the children's character "Buzz O'Bumble".
Yeo presented the breakfast show on 2ZB in Wellington for 23 years from 1972 to 1995. It was consistently the number one rated Wellington breakfast radio programme until the late 1980s. In 1973, Yeo created the children's character "Buzz O'Bumble".Kerryn Pollock. ' Childhood – Buzz O'Bumble', Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Updated 22 March 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2011. "Buzz" appeared every day on the radio show, with his other friends "Belinda" the bee and "Wally Weta". In the summer of 1974 "Buzz" married "Belinda" on the steps of Broadcasting House with programme producer Gerard Duignan dressed as Buzz and Jan McGregor, receptionist, as Belinda Bee.
In April 1997, Yeo moved from Newstalk ZB to Classic Hits 90FM where he hosted a new show. There was considerable local support for Yeo and opposition to his removal from Newstalk ZB to be replaced by Paul Holmes whose breakfast show was networked from Auckland. Later that year, the rating for Holmes's show had dropped while Yeo's ratings for his morning show on Classic Hits had risen. Support for Yeo and local radio shows rather than content produced in Auckland continued with Wellington mayors meeting Newstalk ZB managers. In May 1998, Yeo lost his job as breakfast show host on Classic Hits. The reason given was that Classic Hits was looking to appeal to a younger audience while Yeo was popular with an older demographic.
In 1992, radio reviewer Jane Hurley acknowledged the appeal of Yeo's 2ZB breakfast show as follows:
"The show really rides on Yeo's personality and he's certainly got plenty of that. He's not so much cheerful as permanently stuck in life-and-soul-of-the-party mode. Yeo hardly ever just speaks; he cajoles, he burbles, he sings out, he hams up nearly every word. The whole show's like one long version of the old panto routine, the one that goes "Oh no I didn't/Oh yes you did!"...... it was kinda fun – a loud but genuinely Kiwi version of breakfast bounce, right down to the overgrown buzzy bee mascot. Yeo, bro, I reckon you might just deserve your swarms of fans."Yeo won the metropolitan station section of Local Air Personality of the Year in the Mobil Radio Awards in 1982. Later in 1982 he was the first host of TVNZ's dance show Top Dance '82. In early 1984, he returned to Invercargill to do a special broadcast on 4ZA after the city and Southland towns were affected by flooding.
In 1985, Yeo was one of eight celebrity guest conductors at a Wellington Regional Orchestra VIP concert. Yeo conducted Flight of the Bumblebee.
Yeo reminisced in the book Broadcasting House, 1963–1997: if these walls could talk how the broadcasting studio was close to parliament allowing easy access to politicians. He recalled a conversation with the Prime Minister Bill Rowling about going to the dentist. He also thought that the emergence of the private radio station Radio Hauraki prompted the NZBC to listen to its listeners.
Yeo retired to the Tasman District in 2001. In 2016, he launched a hobby radio station, Radiyo Richmond, broadcasting on a low power frequency to the local area from his home studio, and playing "non-stop pleasant music from all genres" aimed at listeners in his own age group.
Yeo died at his home in Richmond, Tasman on 12 November 2024, at the age of 78.
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