When it emerged he had been paying for pornographic material of children as young as seven via WhatsApp, ’s life rightly imploded.
How Huw Edwards has fallen out with the one person prepared to help him rebuild his shattered career: As the shamed presenter attempts a comeback, his one-time publicist reveals what he's REALLY like
When it emerged he had been paying for pornographic material of children as young as seven via WhatsApp, Huw Edwards’s life rightly imploded.His TV-producer wif...
Advertisement
His TV-producer wife of 30 years, Vicky Flind, left him after police charged the veteran star with three counts of making indecent images of children. He moved back to sleepy west Wales to live an isolated existence with his elderly mother.
But while few could bear the sight of Edwards, now 64, one man stood firmly by his side – PR man Barry Tomes.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
In the months following the broadcaster’s guilty plea in 2024, the showbiz publicist approached him with a pledge to help him rebuild his shattered career – without, I’m told, ‘taking a penny’ for doing so.
The 70-year-old represented Edwards for seven days during the recent broadcast of ’s drama about the broadcaster’s downfall, starring . But in that time he made quite a splash, getting grilled on by who repeatedly asked him: ‘Why are you doing this?’
‘Everybody’s allowed to say their piece,’ Tomes insisted.
Advertisement
Standing by a convicted paedophile was a bold move from Tomes, who has decades of experience in the industry representing the likes of The Beach Boys, and one that earned him much backlash from the wider public.
But I can now reveal that in the latest in a string of mostly self-inflicted disasters to have befallen Edwards, he has now fallen out with the one person willing to indulge his egotistical wish for a comeback.
In September 2024, Huw Edwards received a six-month prison sentence, suspended for two years, after pleading guilty to three charges of making indecent images of children
Edwards launched his Substack on Wednesday, in the first public move he has made since he was taken off-air three years ago
Advertisement
The feud that has emerged between Edwards, who at his peak was trousering more than £520,000 a year from licence-fee payers, and his one-time publicist seems to have been sparked by Edwards’s bizarre decision this week to begin posting his musings on the online blogging platform Substack.
Now Tomes, who had been one of the closest people to the BBC superstar since his downfall, has lifted the lid on what it was really like to work with him, revealing Edwards is still yearning for life in the spotlight.
‘Huw told me he didn’t want to go back to TV,’ Tomes tells me. ‘He said that part of his life was categorically over. But I just think he now wants the limelight again. I think he misses that. It must be a craving for him.’
On whether he would be the one to help him make a return to public life, the celeb PR said: ‘I wouldn’t work with Huw again, absolutely not. I wouldn’t work with him for £100,000 a year because he’s getting it all wrong.
Advertisement
‘I don’t think Substack is the platform for someone like Huw Edwards. He has to accept that nobody cares about his opinion on the new Prime Minister or the economy. Nobody cares. When you commit that type of crime, nobody cares about you anymore.’
In September 2024, Edwards received a six-month prison sentence, suspended for two years, after pleading guilty to three charges of making indecent images of children.
Tomes, who grew up on a council estate in Birmingham, continued: ‘I told him he shouldn’t do anything while he’s still serving his sentence, which will be until September. If he had been in prison, he wouldn’t have the chance to do this. So I don’t think he should be doing it even though he’s not.
‘I think he’s probably surrounded by some close friends who are saying: “You don’t deserve this, you should go back out there.” But people will just want to slate him. He’s opening himself up to ridicule.’
Advertisement
Barry Tomes represented Edwards for seven days during the recent broadcast of Channel 5’s drama about the broadcaster’s downfall
The feud that has emerged between Edwards and his one-time publicist, right, seems to have been sparked by the disgraced presenter's bizarre decision this week to begin posting his musings on Substack




