List of years in British radio explained
The following is a list of years related to the indexing of British radio. Each year is annotated as a reference point.
1910s
- 1916 in British radio –
- 1917 in British radio –
- 1918 in British radio –
- 1919 in British radio –
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
- 1970 in British radio – United Biscuits launches its own radio station, United Biscuits Network, which is broadcast round the clock to the company's four factories; First broadcast of PM, The World Tonight and You and Yours.
- 1971 in British radio – The Open University begins broadcasts on the BBC; First broadcast of Lines from My Grandfather's Forehead.
- 1972 in British radio – The Independent Broadcasting Authority is formed, paving the way for the launch of Independent Local Radio; A decision by the government to restrict the BBC to twenty local radio stations, the corporation closes BBC Radio Durham and its resources are transferred to Carlisle where BBC Radio Carlisle, later BBC Radio Cumbria, is launched; First broadcast of Milligna (or Your Favourite Spike) and I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue.
- 1973 in British radio – The first commercial radio stations start broadcasting, with London's LBC the first to go on air on 8 October, followed eight days later by the launch of Capital Radio; First broadcast of The Foundation Trilogy, Kaleidoscope, Newsbeat and Hello Cheeky.
- 1974 in British radio – Independent Local radio expands into mote areas with the launches of BRMB, Piccadilly Radio, Metro Radio, Swansea Sound, Radio Hallam, Radio City; Regular programmes for the Black and Asian communities launch on BBC Local radio stations in London and Leicester respectively.
- 1975 in British radio – BBC Radio Ulster begins broadcasting; First broadcast of The News Huddlines and Good Morning Ulster.
- 1976 in British radio – Independent Local Radio begins in Northern Ireland when Downtown Radio, begins broadcasting to the Belfast area; First broadcast of Quote... Unquote and The Burkiss Way.
- 1977 in British radio – BBC Radio Cymru begins broadcasting; First broadcast of Money Box, The News Quiz and Sport on Four.
- 1978 in British radio – BBC Radio Wales and BBC Radio Scotland begin broadcasting, the BBC's national radio stations change their MW and LW frequencies; First broadcast of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Good Morning Wales and Good Morning Scotland.
- 1979 in British radio – BBC Radio 2 starts 24-hour broadcasting, having previously closed down between 2am and 5am; United Biscuits Network closes after nine years on air; First broadcast of Science in Action, Feedback, The Food Programme, Breakaway.
1980s
1990s
- 1990 in British radio – Launch of BBC Radio 5 using the MW frequencies of BBC Radio 2, which thereby becomes the first national station in the UK broadcast only on FM; First broadcast of And Now in Colour, Jazz Parade, Flywheel, Shyster, and Flywheel, The Moral Maze and Formula Five.
- 1991 in British radio – The Radio Authority succeeds the Independent Broadcasting Authority as the UK's commercial radio regulator; Radio 4 News FM provides rolling news coverage throughout the Gulf War; Radio 1 becomes a 24-hour station, having previously closed down overnight; First broadcast of Essential Selection, On the Hour and 6-0-6.
- 1992 in British radio – The UK's first national commercial radio station, Classic FM, starts broadcasting, BBC Radio 3 stops broadcasting on MW; First broadcast of No Commitments, Room 101, The Mark Steel Solution and Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge and Last broadcast of Down Your Way, Flying the Flag, Flywheel, Shyster, and Flywheel and On the Hour.
- 1993 in British radio – Virgin 1215 starts broadcasting; First broadcast of Wake Up to Wogan, The Masterson Inheritance, The Pepsi Chart, Essential Mix and Harry Hill's Fruit Corner and Last broadcast of Jazz Parade and Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge; final broadcast of Steve Wright in the Afternoon on Radio 1.
- 1994 in British radio – BBC Radio 5 is relaunched as BBC Radio Five Live, the first regional commercial stations start broadcasting; Radio 1 stops broadcasting on mediumwave; First broadcast of Wake Up to Money, Up All Night, Collins and Maconie's Hit Parade, Julie Enfield Investigates, Lee and Herring and Alan's Big One and Last broadcast of Room 101 and Formula Five; Steve Wright begins presenting The Radio 1 Breakfast Show.
- 1995 in British radio – The UK's first national commercial speech station Talk Radio starts broadcasting; First broadcast of Private Passions, Sunday Night at 10 and Change at Oglethorpe and Last broadcast of The Masterson Inheritance, Lee and Herring and Alan's Big One; Chris Evans succeeds Steve Wright as presenter of The Radio 1 Breakfast Show.
- 1996 in British radio – First broadcast of Chambers, Comedy Quiz, The David Jacobs Collection and Parkinson's Sunday Supplement and Last broadcast of Change at Oglethorpe and The Mark Steel Solution.
- 1997 in British radio – After Chris Evans leaves The Radio 1 Breakfast Show the show is presented by Mark and Lard for a few months, then by Zoe Ball and Kevin Greening; Chris Evans joins Virgin Radio and begins hosting a rival breakfast show on the same day Ball and Greening start theirs; Evans's Ginger Media Group subsequently buys Virgin from Richard Branson; First broadcast of Blue Jam and Westway and Last broadcast of Harry Hill's Fruit Corner, Collins and Maconie's Hit Parade and Comedy Quiz.
- 1998 in British radio – An overhaul of the BBC Radio 2 schedule sees several new presenters join the network; John Dunn retires as presenter of Radio 2's Drivetime programme and is succeeded by Johnnie Walker; Kevin Greening leaves The Radio 1 Breakfast Show, leaving Zoe Ball to present the show by herself; Virgin Radio begins simulcasting an hour of its breakfast show content with Sky One; Last broadcast of Week Ending, Kaleidoscope, Breakaway and Dance Band Days.
- 1999 in British radio – Launch of the Digital One multiplex; Britain's first £1m prize is given away on a segment of Chris Evans's Virgin breakfast show; Steve Wright in the Afternoon returns on BBC Radio 2 six years after programme's final broadcast on BBC Radio 1; Birmingham station BRMB stages the controversial Two Strangers and a Wedding competition; Cliff Richard's single The Millennium Prayer reaches number one in the UK charts despite being banned from the playlist of many radio stations; Last broadcast of Julie Enfield Investigates.
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 – Compass FM launches, 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 radio – BBC 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 radio – Jeremy 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 radio – Ofcom 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 radio – BBC 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 radio – GMG 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 radio – Terry 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
2020s
Timelines of radio by history
Radio stations
Radio companies
Cities
Other
Notes and References
- The Shell Book of Firsts 1983. pp. 145–8.
- Book: Tomalin, Norman. Daventry Calling the World. 1998 . Caedmon of Whitby. 0-905355-46-6.
- Book: Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 0-14-102715-0. 2006.
- Web site: Today in Parliament at 70: Britain's 'longest-running soap opera'. BBC News.
- https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/bbchomeservice/basic/1953-06-02 BBC Genome Project - BBC Home Service listings 2 June 1953
- News: We need to talk: why Britain loves radio phone-ins . theguardian.com . 28 January 2018.
- Web site: How you listen to Absolute Radio could be changing . Planet Radio . Bauer Media Group . 5 January 2023 . AMJan23.