Scott Mills, the 53-year-old former BBC Radio 2 DJ, faces a sudden end to his long career after the broadcaster dismissed him on Monday amid allegations of personal conduct tied to a relationship with a male more than 10 years ago.
Recent Reflections on Career Uncertainty
Just one month prior, at the Attitude 101 event in February, Mills opened up about his 25-year radio journey. “You never know when all this is going to stop,” he stated. He discussed venturing into television outside his comfort zone, including ITV’s The Masked Singer last year and BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing in 2011.
“Why am I doing all these mad things? It’s not really like me at all. I’m trying to do them so it makes everything else less scary,” Mills explained. “I’m just trying to do it all. You never know when all this is going to stop, so why not do it? Who gets to do the things I’ve been doing? It’s mad. So I truly believe that even if something terrifies you, do it.”
Past Struggles with Alcohol and Loss
Mills has long battled chronic anxiety, depression, and panic attacks. In 2001, his boyfriend Mitch died from a drug overdose, plunging him into grief. “I was 26 and we spent every minute together… It was truly awful,” he recalled in a 2012 interview. Police informed him after his Radio 1 show at the Brits.
This tragedy fueled heavy drinking—up to a bottle of spirits daily before shifts. He admitted presenting his early morning Radio 1 show while intoxicated. “That could have been a massive f***-up for me. Even I would’ve sacked me,” Mills confessed. “But thank God for Radio 1—they knew about Mitch and why I was having a bad time. It was a proper wake-up call.”
In 2003, he appeared on air at 4 a.m. still drunk from the Brit Awards. His producer physically roused him. “I absolutely should not have gone on air,” he later said. Despite these incidents, he retained his job, moving to the Drivetime slot a year later.
Career Highlights and Recent Milestones
Mills began at local radio in Hampshire at 16, joining the BBC in 1998. He spent 24 years at Radio 1 before shifting to Radio 2, taking over the Breakfast Show from Zoe Ball in January 2025—the station’s highest-paid role at £355,000–£359,999 annually.
In 2024, he and husband Sam Vaughan won Celebrity Race Across The World, marrying in a star-studded Barcelona ceremony attended by Zoe Ball, Rylan Clark, and Jordan North. They shared their relationship’s ups and downs on the show, including Sam’s initial hesitation after coming out at 23.
Ahead of Channel 4’s The Great Celebrity Bake Off, Mills expressed regret: “Oh God, why did I do that? … Bake Off, you’re on your own in a kitchen. It’s not my natural environment.”
BBC Dismissal and Internal Shock
Mills went off air last Tuesday as bosses reviewed the claim. The BBC confirmed: “While we do not comment on matters relating to individuals, we can confirm Scott Mills is no longer contracted to work with the BBC.”
Veteran DJ Gary Davies fills in from Wednesday, with Vernon Kay favored for the permanent role. BBC Music Director Lorna Clarke emailed staff: “Scott Mills has left the Breakfast show, and the BBC. I know that this news will be sudden and unexpected and therefore must come as a shock.”
Reactions poured in. Jeremy Vine on Radio 2 said he was “taken aback,” noting limited details on “allegations about Scott Mills’s personal conduct.” Colleagues describe “total shock,” with “audible gasps.” A senior broadcaster called it unprecedented since Huw Edwards’ 2024 exit. Friends label Mills “kind and generous,” leaving them “devastated.”
Employment law expert Jo Mackie notes the swift action signals a significant issue, marking a shift in BBC handling of such cases.

