Robert Frederick Elms (born 12 June 1959) is an English writer and broadcaster. Elms was a writer for The Face magazine in the 1980s, and is known for his long-running radio show on BBC Radio London.
Elms was a chronicler of the New Romantic movement of the early 1980s, which saw him become a popular interview choice for the broadcast media. Elms then developed a broadcasting career of his own, working in both radio and television. He was a contributor to Loose Ends (BBC Radio 4) and presented the Channel 4 travel series Travelog during the 1990s. "Robert Elms Biography" Channel 4. archived 28 April 2009. In 1989, his first novel, In Search of the Crack was published by Penguin Books.
In 2005, he published The Way We Wore: A Life in Threads, which charts the changing fashions of his own youth, linking them with the social history of the times.
He served as a patron for the Arts Council's Architecture Week, until the demise of the event in 2007. "Tom Bloxham MBE appointed as Architecture Week Patron", 11 May 2005, Arts Council press release. Archived 28 April 2009.
Since 1994, Elms has presented a long-running radio show on BBC Radio London, in 1999 being referred to as "its top presenter". The show features reports, discussions, and call-ins about Greater London, the history, architecture, geography, city planning and the language of London: in short, the minutiae of the city. Guests who are acknowledged experts in their fields of study appear on a regular basis, including architect Maxwell Hutchinson and film critic Jason Solomons. An extract of the shows is published as a podcast every week. Solomons often covers for Elms when he is on holiday.
Elms is a critic of The Beatles, and refuses to play the band on his BBC London daily radio show. He has been quoted as saying "I just think they are either childlike and simple or rather leaden and pompous – one or the other all the time. For me they turned something that was once sexy and raw and had roots, into something that was totally soulless, playground sing-along music. I think everything that is over-inflated deserves a pin-prick in it occasionally. How can they be above criticism? That's ludicrous."
His memoir, London Made Us, was published in 2019.
Elms is the longest serving presenter on BBC radio for London, celebrating 30 years in 2024.
On 25 September 2025, at a ceremony in the Guildhall, Elms received the Freedom of the City of London for his outstanding contribution to the cultural life of London.
In March 2026, Elms was announced by Tomorrow's Warriors – a music education and artist development charity founded in 1991 – as one of the organisation's inaugural patrons, alongside Baroness Amos, Margaret Busby, Guy Chambers, Nick Hornby, Lizzie Ridding and John Ridding, Michael Watt, Richard Wyatt, Femi Koleoso, Eska and Moses Boyd.
He is married to Christina Wilson and has three children. The family lived in Camden, an area of London he promotesDowling, Stephen. " Camden – Britain's musical Mecca?", BBC, 11 February 2008. archived 28 April 2009. and where he has renovated a Georgian house.Canessa, Joey. " My Home: Robert Elms", The Independent, 1 March 2006. archived 28 April 2009. Elms is a Queens Park Rangers F.C. fan.
In 2021, Elms and his wife moved from their home in Camden to a flat at the Barbican Estate, Central London.
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