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Matthew Wright went to Catholic school. He was not good at school sports, so his mother encouraged him to go to the Croydon Youth Theatre. He developed a deep and abiding love of Hawkwind when a school friend played him their 1977 compilation album "Masters of the Universe". At the age of 14 he appeared in Big Wheels and Sailor (1979) for the Children's Film Foundation. Wright studied English and Drama at the University of Exeter. As a student, Wright was involved in left-wing politics and joined campaigns against nuclear weapons, apartheid in South Africa and serving prime minister Margaret Thatcher. In 1984, he attended the Stonehenge Free Festival and saw his favourite bands Hawkwind and Here and Now, an event he later said "changed my life". As a former child actor who graduated with a drama degree, Wright wanted to work in television, but he couldn't find a job there and became a journalist instead. Wright first gained fame on the Bizarre page of the UK's most popular tabloid, The Sun, and later achieved a showbusiness column in The Daily Mirror. He famously wrote a scathing review of a play starring David Soul which he had never actually seen, resulting in a successful libel action by Soul. In 2000, Wright was chosen to front a series for Channel 5, The Wright Stuff (2000), which included newspaper reviews and topical discussions. The series became a long-running success for Channel 5 in the mornings and Wright has proved a popular but controversial figure for the channel. In 2002, he made news for all the wrong reasons when he accidentally named John Leslie on air as the man being linked to the alleged rape of Ulrika Jonsson. 2011 was a particularly bad year for Wright. The Wright Stuff (2000) attracted the most Ofcom complaints of the year after Wright made a joke about a murdered Scottish teenager. He also made an apology the day after provoking a Twitter storm by asking viewers if they would have sex with the attractive American student Amanda Knox following her successful appeal against her murder conviction. Wright remains left-leaning in his political convictions. He often uses his series to criticize corporate tax avoidance and advocate socialist redistribution of wealth through the tax system. He is also a staunch adherent of political correctness on issues such as race, feminism and gay rights.