The End of the Road Show explained

Show Name:The End of the Road Show
Format:Comedy
Runtime:30 minutes
Starring:Nick Hancock
Neil Mullarkey
Tony Hawks
Rebecca Front
Regina Freedman
Producer:Sarah Smith
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Home Station:BBC Radio 4
Website:The End of the Road Show

The End of the Road Show was a 1991-2 UK radio comedy series, broadcast on BBC Radio 4.[1]

The programme's comedian presenters would visit a different university town or city[2] in the UK in each edition. The running joke was that the presenters were trying to entice young people away from BBC Radio One, a pop music station, to Radio Four, a conservative speech-based station. The title of the programme was derived from the Radio 1 Roadshow (in which the station's disc jockeys would tour Britain's seaside resorts each summer, presenting from a different town each day). The show, very much tongue-in-cheek, claimed that The End of the Road Show was "just like the Radio One roadshow. Except indoors, in the middle of winter, and with everyone sitting in rows".

The programme featured contemporary Radio One jingles, but with the sung word "one" in the original jingle replaced by a Radio Four continuity announcer speaking the word "four".

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BBC Genome search for The End of the Road Show . BBC . 9 February 2019.
  2. Web site: The End Of The Roadshow . British Comedy Guide . 8 May 2022.