
New Mastermind host Clive Myrie has branded the trolls who send him racist abuse as âjokesâ and âsad losersâ but said he is âway too long in the toothâ to get angry and upset.
The broadcaster is replacing John Humphrys at the helm of the long-running BBC quiz show later this month.
It was announced in February that veteran journalist Humphrys was stepping down after 18 years as question master.
Myrie will be the fifth host of the programme, which marks its 50th anniversary next year.

He told the PA news agency: âIt could well be that I end up getting more abuse, I suppose, as a result of Mastermind.
âI got very little after the announcement, actually. Everything was positive, absolutely everything.
âThis is not something that happens every day. Every now and again someone will send an email or send a letter or a card or whatever, making their racist views known.
âBy and large, my days of getting angry are over. Iâm way too long in the tooth for that â or getting upset, rather.
âNow, I just have nothing but pity for these people, that they can be so energised and exercised by the fact that someone might have a little bit more melanin in their skin than they do, that that somehow forces them to be abusive or horrible or whatever.
âSo, I have nothing but pity for these people. Surely there are more important things in life than taking the time to send an email or to send a letter?
âI have nothing but pity for sad, loser racists â thatâs what they are. Theyâre jokes.â

He continued: âItâs always a minority. Itâs a minority of people who, for whatever reason, feel they need to act in that way.
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âI donât have the time to even think about these people.
âTheyâre just very, very sad people, that a bit of melanin can turn them into nasty, nasty folk.
âI donât understand it, and it means absolutely nothing to me. Absolutely nothing.â
Myrie, a regular presenter of BBC News At Six and Ten since 2010, has previously worked as the broadcasterâs correspondent in Asia, AfricaWashingtonParis and Brussels.
He said presenting the quiz show has been a welcome contrast to the grim headlines of the past year, adding: âIt has been nice knowing that this is sort of in the background.
âThe news has been relentless and, for me, pretty much non-stop since the election campaign of December 2019.
âIâve been busy pretty much non-stop through then, lots of journalists have.
âAnd thereâs not been an opportunity, really, to go abroad and have a holiday and really sort of unwind, a sort of non-stop hamster wheel.
âSo it has been nice, actually, to have this to look forward to, something slightly different, a new challenge, a new opportunity. Also a chance for the public to see me in a different light.â
Myrie, who has known Humphrys for a long time, has not sought advice from him, but said he hopes he will be a worthy successor.
He said: âObviously Iâm following in the footsteps of giants of British broadcasting â John Humphrys.
âI hope that that I do the show proud, as he has done over so many years, and so thereâs a level of trepidation there as well.
âAt the same time, Iâm excited to see how the public reacts, and I hope itâs a positive reaction.â
â Clive Myrieâs debut as host of Mastermind will air at 7.30pm on Monday August 23 on BBC Two and iPlayer.