Английская Википедия:2021 in British radio

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Year nav topic5 This is a list of events taking place in 2021 relating to radio in the United Kingdom.

Events

January

  • 1 January –
  • 2 January –
  • 3 January –
    • Clare Teal presents her final edition of The Swing and Big Band Show on BBC Radio 2.[8]
    • Cambridgeshire community station Star Radio joins the Peterborough and Cambridge DAB multiplexes, enabling it to extend its terrestrial coverage.[9]
  • 4 January –
  • 5 January – YouTube bans talkRADIO for allegedly violating its rules by posting information that contradicts expert advice about the COVID-19 pandemic, but reinstates the station within hours.[18]
  • 6 January –
  • 7 January –
    • Adrian Chiles is confirmed as presenter of BBC Radio 5 Live's weekday mid-morning show on Thursdays and Fridays, replacing Emma Barnett.[22]
    • BBC Local Radio launches its Make a Difference: Give A Laptop campaign to provide electronic devices to disadvantaged children during lockdown; by 28 January 17,645 devices have been donated by individuals and businesses.[23]
  • 8 January – BBC Local Radio relaunches the Make a Difference: Give a Laptop campaign to help provide laptops and smart devices for children unable to attend school during the lockdown.[24]
  • 9 January –
  • 11 January –
    • Boom Radio UK, launching on 14 February, unveils its schedule and list of presenters, including Graham Dene, David Hamilton, Nicky Horne, Diana Luke, Kid Jensen and Roger Day.[27]
    • Ofcom has found two community stations, Hitmix Radio in Newcastle-under-Lyme and Cumbernauld FM, to be in breach of their licence agreements for not recording their output. Both stations have blamed technical reasons for their audio recorders not working, something which came to light after listeners complained to Ofcom about content on the station and Ofcom requested a recording of the material.[28]
    • The children's station Fun Kids launches eight new stations, including Fun Kids Classical, Fun Kids Party, Fun Kids Pop Hits and Fun Kids Soundtracks.[29]
    • Online station Rubix Radio launches on DAB in Norwich and Cambridge.[30]
    • Launch of Radio Travel News, a service providing local and national travel bulletins to radio stations for a monthly fee, and delivered half-hourly at peak times via Dropbox.[31] A week on from its launch the service announces an expansion of its output.[32]
  • 13 January – Mica Paris joins Greatest Hits Radio to present Soul Food Songs, a three-part series looking at what makes an uplifting soul anthem and how music helps with people's physical and mental wellbeing. The series will end with a countdown of the top 200 soul food songs.[33]
  • 14 January – Test Match Special begins providing remote coverage of England's winter tour of Sri Lanka.[34]
  • 15 January –
    • Anita Rani joins BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour to present the programme's Friday and Saturday editions.[35]
    • BBC Radio 4 confirms Elizabeth Day and Johny Pitts as new presenters of the Open Book programme, with Day making her debut on 17 January and Pitts making his debut on 31 January.[36] They replace Mariella Frostrup who had presented the programme since 2003.
  • 17 January – A new chart show, the UK Hot40 Countdown, is launched for radio stations in the UK and internationally. The three-hour programme is presented and produced by Chris Brooks, and uses the UK Airplay Chart as provided by Radiomonitor.com.[37]
  • 18 January – Online old skool station NRG announces plans to launch on DAB in the Black Country and Shropshire.[38]
  • 19 January – Bristol-based community station BCfm announces it is providing free DAB sets to people aged 50 and over.[39]
  • 20–21 January – With the north west of England in the grip of Storm Christoph, BBC Radio Manchester remains broadcasting through the night to provide up-to-date coverage of events rather than taking the usual overnight feed from BBC Radio 5 Live.[40]
  • 21 January – Howell James is reappointed chair of Radiocentre, the body overseeing commercial radio in the UK, for another three year term.[41]
  • 22 January – Broadcaster Leo Green announces plans to launch LGRADIO.ONLINE, an online subscription station catering for listeners who feel they are not served by popular mainstream music stations. The station will feature music from the 1950s and 1960s, as well as Motown, Jazz and Soul, and will also include archive programmes made by his father, Benny Green.[42]
  • 23 January – Andy Baird, suspended from Cool FM earlier in the month, has left the station, it is reported. Cool FM has subsequently revamped its weekend schedule.[43]
  • 24 January – Clare Teal joins Jazz FM to present a Sunday evening show dedicated to Big Band and Swing music.[44]
  • 25 January –
    • Former Smooth Radio presenter Dave Brown is hired by Nation Radio UK to present a late evening show on weeknights.[45]
    • Ofcom clears Bauer Radio following a listener complaint over the broadcast of a phone call with a competition, three versions of which were recorded with three different presenters. The competition to win £100,000 was run on the Planet Rock, KISS and Absolute Radio networks, but the listener felt Bauer had not made the networked element of the competition clear and that it was possible for someone listening to any of the networks to win the money.[46]
  • 26 January –
    • BBC Radio Lancashire celebrates its 50th anniversary.[47]
    • The BBC confirms it will not replace the post of director of radio and music following the departure of James Purnell as it cuts out a layer of management as part of cost-cutting measures.[48]
  • 27 January – BFBS signs up with Timbre, a service from SharpStream, to manage and broadcast its online content.[49]
  • 31 January –
    • Radio 2 counts down listeners' top 20 favourite songs from musicals during its Elaine Paige on Sunday show, with "One Day More" from Les Misérables voted as their favourite.[50]
    • Radio 2 airs Musicals: The Greatest Show, a programme presented by Sheridan Smith that celebrates stage musicals. The programme, which will also air on BBC One in February, is part of a three-day celebration of musicals by Radio 2.[51]
    • Colin Slade of Radio Exe presents a special programme celebrating his 50th anniversary in radio; Slade first presented on BBC Radio Medway on 31 January 1971.[52]

February

  • 1 February –
    • Broadcaster Rob Charles takes over as breakfast show presenter at online station All Oldies Radio.[53]
    • Capital XTRA removes DJ Tiny from its schedule after allegations he was charging artists £200 to play their material on his show, something that breaches Ofcom rules.[54] DJ Tiny subsequently apologises for "carelessly and irresponsibly [taking] advantage of [his] position".[55]
  • 2 February – Community station Erewash Sound announces it will remain on air after receiving a grant from Erewash Borough Council.[56]
  • 5 February –
    • talkSPORT begins its live coverage of the England cricket team's tour of India.[57]
    • News UK hires Gordon Smart, a former presenter with Radio X to present and produce a daily TV programme provisionally titled News to Me.[58]
  • 6 February – Broadcaster and music promoter Adrian Skirrow joins Radio Caroline.[59]
  • 8 February –
    • Magic Radio begins Our Love, a week-long series celebrating multicultural relationships among its listeners.[60]
    • Sound Radio, founded as an internet station in 2018, launches on FM in North East Wales.[61]
    • Ofcom finds Capital XTRA Reloaded guilty of breaching regulations for playing "I Got 5 On It" by Luniz, a song deemed to contain racially offensive language, on 7 September 2020.[62]
  • 9 February –
    • Moray Firth Radio's 40th anniversary is celebrated with an evening online event staged by members of the Radio Academy's Scottish branch.[63]
    • The RadioToday website reports that 30 community stations are to begin airing Greenborne, a 12 episode soap set in a village in the post-COVID era and starring John Altman.[64]
  • 10 February –
  • 12 February –
    • Honeycomb Investments Ltd, a company founded by Michael Tabor of Global Investments, buys an 8.8% share in the US company iHeart Media.[67]
    • Hope Radio 87.9fm returns to the airwaves in South Birmingham as a temporary service providing information about COVID-19, and to encourage its listeners to get vaccinated.[68]
  • 14 February –
  • 15 February – Figures released for the fourth quarter of 2020 indicate BBC Sounds had 3.7 million listeners during the week of the 2020 United States presidential election, a record number of people using the service.[71]
  • 18 February –
    • A letter signed by more than 100 prominent figures, including politicians and writers, has criticised BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour for what it describes as a "strikingly hostile" interview with Zara Mohammed, the first female leader of the Muslim Council of Britain.[72] In response to the letter the BBC says presenter Emma Barnett raised "legitimate" issues during the programme, but says it will "reflect on the concerns raised".[73]
    • BBC Asian Network announces it has hired 13 new presenters, each of whom will present their own Sunday programme between March 2021 and February 2022.[74]
    • Ofcom begins awarding the first of a number of small scale DAB licenses, with five of a proposed 25 announced in the first round. A second round of licences is being postponed while the COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing.[75]
    • A number of former Radio Victory presenters from the three eras of the Portsmouth station launch Victory Online.[76] The service is not connected with the trademark owner, Independent Local Radio Limited,[77] but the station uses much of the historic Radio Victory station on-air branding.
  • 21 February – David Jensen joins Jazz FM to present a six-part series about his love of jazz music. The programme will also highlight his work for Parkinson's UK.[78]
  • 24 February – Bauer Media enters into an agreement to buy Communicorp, the Ireland-based company that owns brands including Today FM and Newstalk. The agreement is subject to approval from the regulator, and excludes CommuniCorp's UK radio stations which are operated under the Global name.[79]
  • 25 February – BBC Radio 1 confirms that eight of the presenters given a chance to present one-off shows over Christmas 2020 will now present a month of Early Breakfast Shows on Friday through the coming months. The eight presenters are Dean McCullough, Rakeem Omar, Danni Diston, Sam MacGregor, Darcy Kelly, Alex West, Numi Gildert and Robyn Richford.[80]
  • 27 February – BBC Music Introducing debuts "I Like This Feeling", a song recorded by 40 separate BBC Introducing artists from home, each of who contributed eight bars to the track without hearing the contributions from others.[81]

March

  • 1 March –
    • Konnect Radio launches online as the UK's first station playing both Christian and mainstream music.[82]
    • Bauer Media creates a Happy News skill for Amazon Alexa, allowing listeners to hear the day's happy news stories from their newsroom.[83]
  • 2 March –
  • 4 March – Research commissioned by Radiocentre indicates that 8 million adults are tuning into commercial radio while remote working during the COVID-19 pandemic.[86]
  • 5 March –
    • Former Capital presenter Anton Powers joins KISS to present Friday evening's In the Mix from 6pm, as well as a Saturday show on KISSTORY.[87]
    • Scala Radio appoints presenter Alexis Ffrench as its inaugural Composer in Residence.[88]
  • 6 March – Chris Dinnis joins Goldmine FM to present the Saturday Breakfast Show.[89]
  • 7 March –
    • Ofcom gives Bauer Radio approval to add its newly acquired Plymouth licence to its South West Approved Area of radio stations.[90]
    • KISS Life, a new Sunday evening programme presented by Swarzy Macaly, makes its debut on KISS. The programme features stories from listeners around the UK.[91]
  • 8 March –
  • 10 March – Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Dame Judi Dench and Health Secretary Matt Hancock join members of the public in the #ThankYouRadio campaign, launched by Radiocentre to thank commercial radio for the role it has played during the COVID-19 pandemic.[94]
  • 11 March –
    • Bauer Radio announces plans to launch Bauer Audiostream, a new digital audio advertising network for the Nordic countries.[95]
    • BBC Global News Ltd and BBC Children's Production are to be transferred into BBC Studios from April 2022, bringing all of the BBC's international commercial operations under one roof.[96]
  • 12 March –
    • Boom Radio becomes available nationally on the Sound Digital platform.[97]
    • Birmingham's New Style Radio is fined £2,000 by Ofcom for failing to file a financial report for 2018 on time; the report, expected in March 2019, was filed in June 2020.[98]
  • 15 March – Simon Mayo joins Greatest Hits Radio to present the drivetime show which becomes a national programme across all Greatest Hits stations, while former local drivetime presenters move to afternoons. Mayo also continues at Scala Radio with a weekend show.[99][100]
  • 16 March –
  • 17 March – Following the death of Sarah Everard, Bauer stations in Scotland broadcast Women's Safety: What Can Men Do?, an hour-long programme discussing the issue of women's safety.[103]
  • 18 March –
  • 19 March –
    • Former Downtown Radio presenter Robert Skates announces plans to launch R radio, an internet station for Northern Ireland, which will launch in the summer.[106]
    • Ofcom announce plans to trial small-scale FM licences with a short radius, intended for use by premises such as businesses or hospitals.[107]
  • 22 March – The BBC has signed a four year deal with the England and Wales Cricket Board to air cricket coverage on BBC radio, with over 400 matches a year to be broadcast.[108]
  • 23 March – BBC Local Radio in England marks the first anniversary of its Make a Difference campaign, launched on 23 March 2020, the day the UK was first put into lockdown.[109]
  • 25 March – Ofcom gives Bauer permission to swap Absolute Radio with Greatest Hits Radio on 105.8FM in London.[110]
  • 26 March –
    • Radiocentre urges Ofcom to rethink proposals to limit external regulation of the BBC, fearing it will lead to a reduction in the quality of programming and damage commercial rivals.[111]
    • Waitrose & Partners become the official sponsors of The Graham Norton Radio Show on Virgin Radio UK after signing a twelve month deal to sponsor the commercials-free show. The first sponsored show is aired the following day.[112]
  • 28 March – Jeff Young presents his last Sunday morning show for Jazz FM, having announced the previous weekend his intention to leave the station after ten years.[113]
  • 30 March – The start of BBC Radio Stoke's breakfast show is delayed by an hour following a small fire at the studios. BBC Radio Shropshire is heard in its place for an hour until the fire brigade give staff the all clear to enter the building.[114]
  • 31 March –
    • Ofcom awards four more small-scale DAB licences to operators in Inverclyde, Winchester, Cambridge and Sheffield and Rotherham.[115]
    • JACK Radio appoints Ed Crofts, a former producer with the Heart network, to produce breakfast shows on all of its stations.[116]
    • Following the death of Sarah Everard, Bauer Radio streams a special panel show titled We Need to Talk About Women's Safety simultaneously across its stations at 8pm.[117]
    • To mark the 31st anniversary of the launch of Choice FM, London's first and to date only black radio station, a blue plaque is unveiled at 16–18 Trinity Gardens, Brixton, site of its first studios.[118][119]

April

  • 1 April – As an April Fool prank on Radio 2, actor Lewis McLeod impersonates Jeremy Vine, appearing in place of Vine on Ken Bruce's show to preview the day's edition of The Jeremy Vine Show.[120]
  • 2 April – BBC Local Radio launches Squad Goals, a non-terrestrial service providing football updates and information that airs while local stations are providing match coverage for which they only have terrestrial broadcasting rights, and that replaces a looped message telling listeners on Freeview, BBC Sounds and smart devices they are unable to listen to live football because of rights issues.[121]
  • 3 April –
  • 4 April –
    • As part of a weekend of programming to celebrate its Make a Difference campaign, BBC Local Radio airs the Easter address from the Archbishop of Canterbury followed by Life's Second Chances, a documentary about people who have recovered from COVID-19 and see it as a second chance at life. Other programmes in this strand will air at 9am on Good Friday (2 April), Easter Monday (5 April) and Easter Tuesday (6 April), and feature contributions from Sir Tom Jones, Beverley Knight and Little Mix congratulating those who have made a difference.[125]
    • Jazz FM begins a new Sunday presenting line up which sees Tony Minvielle moving from a late night slot to replace Jeff Young's show, and the fulltime return of Robbie Vincent.[113]
  • 5 April –
  • 6 April –
  • 9 April –
    • Regular programming on UK radio stations is suspended following the death of Prince Philip, which is announced at midday. Following the announcement stations go into "obituary mode", providing news coverage of the death (all BBC stations simulcast a special BBC News programme which is broadcast from midday until 5pm), or suspend their usual playlists in favour of sombre music.[132]
    • Radio Clatterbridge, one of the UK's oldest hospital radio stations, celebrates its 70th anniversary with a day of special programming.[133]
  • 10 April – An edition Radio 2's Sounds of the 60s is cancelled for the first time due to the death of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
  • 12 April –
    • Ofcom decides to take no action against Capital Xtra over one of its presenters charging to play tracks on his show.[134]
    • Ian Skelly, who previously presented Essential Classics, becomes one of the presenters of BBC Radio 3's Afternoon Concert.[127]
  • 13 April – Ofcom confirms plans to re-tighten rules regarding the content radio stations should be broadcasting. For example, due to the COVID-19 pandemic some stations have not broadcast content such as local news and local produced programming, but they will be required to do so again from the end of September.[135]
  • 14 April – Ian Moss is appointed as CEO of Radiocentre, replacing Siobhan Kenny who leaves the post in June.[136]
  • 15 April – The BBC confirms that a further ten BBC Local Radio stations will switch off their mediumwave frequencies during May and June 2021. The stations that will no longer be available on AM are BBC Essex, BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, BBC Radio Devon, BBC Radio Leeds, BBC Radio Sheffield, BBC Hereford & Worcester, BBC Radio Stoke, BBC Radio Lancashire, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Radio Foyle.[137]
  • 16 April – The Radio Academy appoints Sam Bailey, previously a Commissioning Executive at BBC Radio 1, as its new Managing Director, with immediate effect.[138]
  • 19 April –
    • BBC Local Radio announces the launch of its "Make a Difference – Back to Business" initiative to support England's arts sector.[139]
    • Absolute Radio confirms that Chris Kamara will join the station's presenting team for the delayed Euro 2020; he will join regular presenters on both the breakfast and drivetime programmes.[140]
    • Radiocentre Director of External Affairs Matt Payton is appointed to the newly created role of chief operating officer.[141]
    • Ofcom finds Radio Caroline in breach of regulations after it played the song "French Kiss" by Lil Louis, which contains "prolonged sounds of sexual moaning" during its breakfast show on 17 December 2020, and at a time when children could be listening. In response the station says it has launched a review of its database.[142]
    • Maritime Radio celebrates its second anniversary on air by beginning a 25-hour marathon programme at 11pm.[143]
    • Helen Haslam, a former executive with Bauer Media, Communicorp and GMG Radio, is appointed as Business Director of RadioWorks Group.[144]
  • 20 April – BBC Radio 1 announces major changes to its schedules from September. Annie Mac will also leave the network in July, and Diplo from September.[145]
  • 22 April – BBC Radio 1 relax launches on BBC Sounds.[146]
  • 23 April –
  • 24 April – David Allen announces live on air that his syndicated Saturday night music request show on BBC Local Radio is being axed from 15 May, then criticises the BBC for its decision.[149] This programme turns out to be his final one after he is subsequently told he is not welcome to present what would have been his final three shows.[150]
  • 25 April – kmfm launches The Kent Top 40, a live Sunday afternoon chart show presented by Alex and Numi.[151]
  • 26 April –
    • Following a campaign by the UK Community Radio Network, Ofcom gives community stations permission to air split content for different parts of the areas they cover.[152]
    • Bauer switches off its mediumwave frequencies in Lancashire, Greater Manchester, Leeds and Humberside. They are being switched off following the launch of Greatest Hits Radio on FM in those areas.[153]
    • Edinburgh singer-songwriter Bonnie Kemplay is named as the winner of BBC Radio 1's Live Lounge Introducing talent search.[154]
    • Newcastle stations Metro and TFM announce they are relocating their studios and offices to Gainsborough House, a Grade II listed building in the city's Grey Street.[155]
  • 28 April – talkSPORT announces plans to join a social media boycott by English football in response to racism in football, from 3pm on Friday 30 April until Tuesday 4 May.[156]
  • 30 April –
    • Bauer Radio confirms that former Swansea Sound breakfast show presenter Kevin Johns will not return to presenting with Bauer following his trial and acquittal on allegations of sexually abusing a teenage boy during the 1980s.[157]
    • Lyca Media II Ltd, owners of London's Lyca Dilse Radio, file a request with Ofcom to change the station's format to a retro Asian service with lifestyle speech for the over 40s.[158]

May

June

  • 1 June –
    • Bauer Media announces the completion of its acquisition of CommuniCorp.[182]
    • talkRADIO announces it has signed Trisha Goddard to present a Saturday afternoon show, which she will present live from the United States.[183]
    • BBC Radio Leeds stops broadcasting on MW.
    • Jazz FM announces a new six part series for Sunday nights presented by Sir Michael Parkinson in which he will share his love of jazz music.[184]
  • 6 June – Footballer David James presents a one-off programme for Scala Radio titled Football Scores with David James. The programme explores the long standing partnership between football and classical music[185]
  • 7 June –
    • BBC Radio Gloucestershire stops broadcasting on MW to the Stow-on-the-Wold area.
    • talkRADIO confirms that James Whale will return to presenting its late show, his first stint on the show having been when the station was first launched in the 1990s.[186]
    • Greatest Hits Radio announce they have signed up Martin Kemp to present London Calling, a four part series exploring the influence London had on the music and culture of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s; the series begins on 9 June at 7pm.[187]
    • BBC Radio Scotland announce they have signed Biffy Clyro frontman Simon Neil to present a six part series in which he shares his love of music, starting in July.[188]
    • Launch of the temporary station Virgin Radio Pride UK, a station aimed at the LGBTQ+ community that will be on air on DAB in London and online for four months, and have a predominantly LGBTQ+ presenter lineup.[189]
  • 9 June –
    • BBC Radio Wales stops broadcasting on MW across north-east Wales.
    • Launch of Care Radio, an online station aimed at the estimated nine million paid and unpaid carers in the UK. The station launches online but has plans to join DAB.[190]
  • 10 June – Doncaster-based station TX1 Radio moves onto DAB+.[191][192]
  • 11 June –
  • 12 June – Simon Mayo is among those to be recognised in the 2021 Birthday Honours with an MBE for his services to broadcasting.[196]
  • 14 June – Nicky Campbell is to leave the breakfast show on BBC Radio 5 Live after almost 20 years at the helm.[197]
  • 16 June – London's Lyca Dilse Radio is granted permission from Ofcom to change its format to a retro Asian service following a consultation.[198]
  • 17 June – Bauer purchases Stockport-based Imagine FM and announces it will join the Greatest Hits Radio network.[199]
  • 21 June –
    • Jazz FM launches The Robbie Vincent Music Garden Party, a streaming channel featuring music played by Robbie Vincent on his show for the station.[200]
    • Plans are announced for the launch of Frisk Radio, a station focusing on dance and R'n'B in the North East of England, with a provisional launch date for the autumn.[201]
  • 22 June – BBC Radio 2 announces a series of programmes celebrating the summer of 1996, including specials about the Spice Girls and Euro 96.[202]
  • 23 June – Following an agreement between the BBC and Australian media company Southern Cross Austereo, BBC content becomes available via the LiSTNR app.[203]
  • 25 June – Anna Foster announces she is to leave BBC Radio 5 Live's Drivetime show to become the BBC's new Middle East Correspondent.[204]
  • 28 June – Elise Evans takes over as presenter of the breakfast show on BBC Radio WM, replacing Daz Hale.[205]
  • 30 June –

July

August

September

October

  • 1 October – Nation Radio Scotland becomes available on DAB in the Central Belt.[290]
  • 3 October – Ben Earle of The Shires joins Absolute Radio Country to present a Sunday morning show.[291]
  • 7 October –
  • 8 October – The Glasgow trial small scale DAB multiplex is closed by operator Nation Broadcasting ahead of a permanent relaunch of the multiplex in 2022.
  • 11 October – Chris Tarrant presents a tribute evening to David Jensen at London's Cadogan Hall in aid of Parkinsons UK; Jensen has lived with the condition for ten years.[294]
  • 14 October – BBC Radio 2's Sounds of the 60s live show, which features music and stories of the decade, is cancelled at the last minute after a safety issue at the Margate venue where it was due to be held.[295]
  • 15 October – Heart Christmas returns to the airwaves, and will air until after Christmas.[296]
  • 16 October –
    • Radio 1's Out Out! Live, a music concert to celebrate the return of the night out, is held at the SSE Arena in Wembley, London.[297]
    • Radio 2 celebrates National Album Day with an all-female playlist.[292]
  • 17 October –
  • 19 October – David Elms, Head of Media at KPMG, joins the board of Boom Radio as non-executive chairman.[301]
  • 21 October –
  • 22 October – Times Radio signs Dominic O'Connell as its first business correspondent.[306]
  • 24 October – Adele Roberts, who presents Radio 1's Weekend Breakfast Show, reveals that she has been diagnosed with bowel cancer and will undergo surgery to remove a tumour.[307]
  • 25 October –
    • The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Commercial Radio publishes its The Future of Radio report which calls for an urgent plan to make sure radio remains free-to-air on smart speakers.[308]
    • Melissa Todd, a newsreader with Thanet-based community station Academy FM, gives a revealing interview to Kent Online about her career as a dominatrix ahead of the publication of her book, My Body Is My Business. As a result of the article Todd is suspended from her role at the station, but subsequently joins Cinque Ports FM as a presenter of a late night love songs programme.[309][310][311]
  • 26 October – BBC Radio Manchester presenter Justin Moorhouse announces he has left the station after disagreements over the length of his show.[312]
  • 27 October – RAJAR publishes its first set of post-COVID audience figures following an 18 month hiatus, and the first to include Boom Radio and Times Radio listenership. These show a weekly audience for Boom of 233,000 with an average listening time of eight hours per week, and an audience for Times Radio of 837,000 per week with a weekly average of 5.5 hours.[313][314] The figures also show a fall in the number of breakfast show listeners to a number of stations when compared to pre-pandemic figures, although RAJAR says this could be as a result of a change in the way it records its figures.[315]
  • 29 October – Europe's Biggest Dance Show returns to Radio 1 for the fourth time.
  • 30 October – The Radio Today website reports that BBC Local Radio Political Correspondent Paul Rowley is retiring after 47 years in broadcasting.[316]
  • 31 October – A foundation named for Zetland FM presenter Julie Donaldson, who died from COVID on 31 October 2020, is launched at an event in Redcar. The foundation has been established to encourage youngsters to follow careers in arts and entertainment.[317]

November

December

Station debuts

Terrestrial stations

Online stations

Small-scale multiplex switch-ons

  • 29 November – Tynemouth/South Shields

Closing this year

Date Station Debuted
3 April West Yorkshire Radio 2020
23 May Chesterfield Radio 2020
27 May HG1 Radio[385] 2020
30 June Retro Sound 2021
8 October Bond 24/7 2021

Programme debuts

Continuing radio programmes

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

2020s

Ending this year

  • 24 April – David Allen (2000s–2021)
  • 30 July – Annie Mac (2004–2021)

Deaths

See also

References

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