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Phillip Schofield
Phillip Bryan Schofield (born 1 April 1962) is an English television presenter who works for ITV. He is currently the co-presenter of This Morning (2002–present) and Dancing on Ice (2006–2014, 2018–present) alongside Holly Willoughby. His other work for ITV includes All Star Mr & Mrs (2008–2016), The Cube (2009–2015), and 5 Gold Rings (2017–present). Schofield gained national attention working for the BBC, first as a continuity presenter for Children's BBC on weekdays from 1985 to 1987, then as a presenter on the children's Saturday morning magazine show Going Live! between September 1987 and April 1993.
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This Morning Phil and Holly queue jump apology episode sees fuming fans complain to Ofcom

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www.dailystar.co.uk

This Morning has been hit with over 50 Ofcom complaints amid Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield's ongoing queue-jump drama.The ITV daytime programme received 55 complaints following its September 20 show, when hosts Holly and Phil addressed claims that they'd skipped the Queen's lying-in-state queue.The pair sparked a furious backlash when photos emerged of them ahead of the massive queues outside Westminster, which saw many queue through the night to visit the late monarch.READ MORE:Bar offers free queue jump if 'your name is Holly or Phil' amid This Morning rowMany threatened to boycott the show and some people even suggested they should be sacked from their hosting jobs.ITV issued a statement shortly after to explain that the duo didn't jump the queues and were both there to cover the event as part of the media.Holly and Phil then broke their silence on the queue drama on their September 20 show alongside a pre-recorded film.Reading the statement, Holly said: "We were given official permission to access the hall, it was strictly for the purpose of reporting on the event for millions of people in the UK who haven't been able to visit Westminster in person."The rules were that we would be quickly escorted around the edges to a platform at the back, in contrast, those paying respects walked along a carpeted area beside the coffin and were given time to pause."None of the broadcasters and journalists there took anyone's place in the queue and no one filed past the Queen."She added: "We, of course, respected those rules – however, we realise that it may have looked like something else."And therefore, totally understand the reaction."The pre-recorded piece angered viewers at the time, with many slamming the show on.

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