List of years in British radio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of years related to the indexing of British radio. Each year is annotated as a reference point.

1920s[]

1930s[]

1940s[]

1950s[]

1960s[]

1970s[]

1980s[]

1990s[]

2000s[]

  • 2000 in British radio – The first annual BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards are held; Chris Evans sells his Ginger Media Group to SMG plc for £225m; Zoe Ball leaves The Radio 1 Breakfast Show and is succeeded by Sara Cox; First broadcast of Sounds of the 70s and The Jo Whiley Show
  • 2001 in British radio – Chris Evans is sacked by Virgin Radio for poor timekeeping; Saga 105.7 FM, the first radio station aimed at an over-50 listening audience, is launched in Birmingham
  • 2002 in British radioBBC 6 Music launches on 11 March, BBC 1Xtra on 16 August, and BBC 7 on 15 December; Jimmy Young leaves Radio 2 after 30 years as its lunchtime presenter; Last broadcast of The Pepsi Chart
  • 2003 in British radioJeremy Vine succeeds Jimmy Young as Radio 2's lunchtime presenter; Death of Alan Keith who, at 94, is Britain's oldest and longest serving radio presenter; Launch of Saga 106.6 FM in Nottingham
  • 2004 in British radioOfcom takes over the regulation of British radio from The Radio Authority; Chris Moyles takes over the breakfast show on Radio 1, while Scott Mills takes over as presenter of the network's drivetime show; 100.7 Heart FM presenter Tushar Makwana dies in hospital following a hit-and-run incident during a botched robbery attempt at his home; Final broadcast of Letter from America, radio's longest-running speech programme
  • 2005 in British radioBBC Radio 3 twice clears its schedule to devote several days to the music of a single composer, with Ludwig van Beethoven and Johan Sebastian Bach; London's 102.2 Jazz FM closes after fifteen years on air and is replaced by 102.2 Smooth FM; The UK's first Islamic radio station, Islam Radio, is established in Bradford, West Yorkshire
  • 2006 in British radioGMG Radio acquires the Saga Radio Group; Chris Evans succeeds Johnnie Walker as presenter of Radio 2 Drivetime; Last broadcast of It's Been a Bad Week
  • 2007 in British radio – All Saga stations are relaunched as Smooth Radio, with the London and Manchester Smooth FM stations also rebranding to Smooth Radio; Classic Gold and Capital Gold merge to create Gold; The RNIB launches Insight Radio, Europe's first radio station for blind and partially sighted listeners; Last broadcast of Parkinson's Sunday Supplement
  • 2008 in British radio – Virgin Radio is rebranded as Absolute Radio following its acquisition by Times of India; GMG Radio relaunches Jazz FM on DAB
  • 2009 in British radioTerry Wogan presents his final edition of Wake Up to Wogan after announcing his plans to leave the Radio 2 Breakfast Show; Sunday Night at 10 presenter Malcolm Laycock leaves Radio 2 following a disagreement with his producer over programme content, and is succeeded by Clare Teal

2010s[]

  • 2010 in British radioSmooth Radio is relaunched as a national station on DAB; Chris Evans takes over as Radio 2 breakfast presenter with The Chris Evans Breakfast Show, while Simon Mayo becomes Drivetime presenter; First Broadcast of Weekend Wogan
  • 2011 in British radio – BBC 7 is relaunched as BBC Radio 4 Extra; Simon Bates joins Smooth Radio to present Simon Bates at Breakfast and resurrects his Our Tune feature; Launch of Smooth 70s and Absolute Radio 70s; Last broadcast of The Jo Whiley Show on Radio 1
  • 2012 in British radioGMG Radio (owners of Smooth and Real Radio) is acquired by Global Radio (the owner of stations such as Capital and Heart)
  • 2013 in British radioSmooth 70s is closed after nearly two years on air; First broadcast of and last broadcast of The David Jacobs Collection as David Jacobs leaves Radio 2
  • 2014 in British radioJazz FM stops broadcasting nationally on DAB from New Year's Day, but continues to air in London; London's LBC is launched as a national talk station on DAB; Smooth Radio is relaunched as a number of local stations; Simon Bates leaves Smooth after three years; London One Radio is launched to cater for London's Italian community
  • 2015 in British radioMagic launches on Digital One; launches as an online station for blind and partially sighted listeners; Ken Bruce celebrates 30 years with Radio 2 and Last Broadcast of Weekend Wogan
  • 2016 in British radio – Launch of the second digital multiplex; Jazz FM returns to broadcasting nationally on DAB; Wireless Group launches Virgin Radio UK; Insight Radio is rebranded as RNIB Connect Radio; Robbie Shepherd retires as host of BBC Radio Scotland’s Take the Floor show after presenting for 35 years; Terry Wogan dies aged 77
  • 2017 in British radioRadio Caroline is granted an Ofcom licence to broadcast on mediumwave to Sussex and North Essex; Nigel Farage joins LBC to present The Nigel Farage Show; First broadcast of Brexitcast
  • 2018 in British radioEddie Mair leaves Radio 4's PM programme and moves to LBC to present a Drivetime show; Chris Evans and Simon Mayo leave Radio 2; First broadcast of Radio 1 Breakfast with Greg James and Last broadcast of The Sunday Hour
  • 2019 in British radioJohn Humphrys retires as presenter of Radio 4's Today programme; Zoe Ball takes over as presenter of The Radio 2 Breakfast Show while Sara Cox begins presenting Radio 2 Drivetime; Chris Evans joins Virgin Radio UK to present the Breakfast Show; Simon Mayo joins Scala Radio and is its inaugural presenter; The Danny Baker Show comes to an end after Baker is fired from BBC Radio 5 Live; Brexitcast begins airing on television in a late night Thursday slot on BBC One while continuing to air on radio

2020s[]

  • 2020 in British radio – The BBC announces major changes to the schedule across the network due to the COVID-19 pandemic; Rhod Sharp steps down as presenter of BBC Radio Five Live's Up All Night after presenting the programme since its launch in 1994; Nigel Farage leaves LBC; All regional Sam FM stations along with many other local English commercial stations become Greatest Hits Radio; Radio Caroline broadcasts the Queen's Christmas Message for the first time, 56 years after its first request to do so was turned down; First broadcast of and last broadcast of Brexitcast
  • 2021 in British radioWoman's Hour celebrates its 75th year with a special message from The Queen; Boom Radio is launched to target baby boomers; UK radio stations enter obituary mode following the death of Prince Philip on 9 April; The first DAB multiplex for the Channel Islands begins broadcasting; Nick Grimshaw leaves BBC Radio 1 after 14 years with the station; RAJAR publishes its first set of post-COVID audience figures following an 18 month hiatus; Comedian Iain Lee launches the online station ; Janice Long dies aged 66; The recording and release of many radio programmes are expected to be delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  • 2022 in British radioGB News Radio is launched as an audio simulcast of the GB News TV channel; The recording and release of many radio programmes are expected to be delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Timelines of radio by history[]

Radio stations[]

Radio companies[]

  • Timeline of Bauer Radio
  • Timeline of Global Radio

Nations[]

Cities[]

  • Timeline of radio in London
  • Timeline of radio in Manchester

Other[]


References[]

  1. ^ The Shell Book of Firsts 1983. pp. 145–8.
  2. ^ Tomalin, Norman. Daventry Calling the World (PDF). Caedmon of Whitby. ISBN 0-905355-46-6.
  3. ^ Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  4. ^ "Today in Parliament at 70: Britain's 'longest-running soap opera'". BBC News.
  5. ^ BBC Genome Project - BBC Home Service listings 2 June 1953
  6. ^ "We need to talk: why Britain loves radio phone-ins". theguardian.com. 28 January 2018.
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