Neha Patil (Editor)

2010 in British radio

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This is a list of events in British radio during 2010.

Contents

Events

  • 7 January - Jonathan Ross announces he will leave the BBC when his contract expires in July.
  • 11 January - Chris Evans takes over as presenter of the Radio 2 breakfast show. The programme's launch also sees the return of newsreader Moira Stuart to the BBC after two years. Simon Mayo takes over the drivetime show.
  • 11 January - Gaby Roslin takes over as host of the breakfast show alongside Paul Ross on BBC London 94.9.
  • 13 January - The BBC admits that it gave undue prominence to the band U2 in February 2009 after it repeatedly broadcast a “U2 = BBC” graphic and allowed presenters to claim the corporation was “part of launching” the group's latest album.
  • 15 January - N-Dubz singer Dappy and the BBC are forced to apologise after the rapper sent abusive text messages, which included death threats, to a woman who complained about him during an appearance on Radio 1's Chris Moyles Show on 12 January.
  • 17 January - Lynn Parsons returns to Radio 2 as a regular presenter with an early Sunday morning breakfast show. The show aired until April when the Radio 2 schedule was overhauled.
  • 14 February - Sir Terry Wogan begins his weekly Sunday morning show on Radio 2. Weekend Wogan is hosted in front of a live audience in the Radio Theatre at Broadcasting House with an initial run of three months.
  • 17 February - It is announced that the newspaper review show What the Papers Say, which was on television for many years, will be revived on BBC Radio 4, airing for 12 episodes in the run up to the 2010 general election and then returning on a permanent basis if it proves to be popular.
  • 27 February - The six stations in the Smooth Radio network stage a "Starlight Supper", en event aimed at raising money for a number of charities: Breast Cancer Care in London, Macmillan Cancer Support in the Northwest, North East and West Midlands, the Rainbows Hospice for Children and Young People in the East Midlands and Marie Curie’s Big Build in Glasgow.
  • 2 March - BBC Director General Mark Thompson confirms plans to close BBC 6 Music and the BBC Asian Network as part of a cost-cutting drive. The proposals will also see BBC Radio 7 rebranded as BBC Radio 4 Extra and cutbacks to the BBC website.
  • 11 March - BBC Radio 2 confirms plans to overhaul its schedule from April. This will include moving two of its longest-running shows, Big Band Special and The Organist Entertains to different timeslots, and switching its comedy hour from Thursday to Saturday evenings - the second time it has done this in 12 months.
  • 24 March - The five radio stations owned by YMC Ltd (3TR FM, Bath FM, Brunel FM, Quay West 102.4/100.8 and Quay West 107.4) are closed by administrators after multiple refusals on the part of regulator Ofcom to transfer the licenses, following a number of financial issues at the stations after TLRC's sale.
  • 26 March - Les Ross presents his final breakfast show for Birmingham's Big City Radio.
  • 4 April - The timeslot for Bob Harris's Saturday evening/Sunday morning show on Radio 2 is moved forward an hour, meaning it airs from 12am-3am instead of 11pm-2am.
  • 15 April - Under new guidelines from Ofcom, from May commercial radio rivals will be allowed to co-locate to cut costs, and to slash local programming. The guidelines are a result of the recently passed Digital Economy Act.
  • 19 April - Amanda Bowman becomes presenter of a late night show syndicated across BBC Local Radio in the Midlands.
  • 30 April - It is reported that Emma Forbes has quit as co-host of BBC Radio 2's Saturday night show Going Out with Alan Carr after a disagreement with her bosses over time off.
  • 30 April - It is reported that Smooth and Real Radio have become the official broadcasters of the switch-on ceremony for the Blackpool Illuminations, after securing the broadcast rights from BBC Radio 2 which had aired it since 1997.
  • 12 May – Jeremy Hunt is appointed as Culture Secretary by new Prime Minister David Cameron.
  • 13 May - The BBC confirms that comedian Graham Norton will take over Jonathan Ross's show on Radio 2 when Ross leaves the network later in the year.
  • 14 May - It is reported that the actor Russell Crowe stormed off an edition of Radio 4's Front Row after presenter Mark Lawson raised the issue of his accent in his portrayal of Robin Hood. Crowe had faced criticism for his depiction of the character.
  • 18 May - The BBC apologises after BBC WM presenter Danny Kelly joked on air the previous afternoon that The Queen had died.
  • 31 May - BBC Radio 1 teams up with forces broadcaster BFBS for a ten-hour takeover show from Camp Bastion.
  • 21 June - Global Radio announces plans to reduce the number of its local Heart stations from 33 to 15 so-called "super stations" in a reorganisation that will lead to the loss of up to 200 full-time and freelance posts. The stations will have their own breakfast and drivetime shows, and local news bulletins, but all other output will come from London. A further two stations owned by Global will also be subsumed into the Heart network.
  • 25 June - BBC Radio 1 is criticised by the commercial radio trade body RadioCentre following a Harry Potter Day in which the station gave what it called “undue prominence” to the release of the film Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
  • 29 June - Smooth Radio announces plans to merge its five stations based in England, creating a national network. The new station will be based in Manchester and will see the loss of 60 jobs at Smooth's other bases. A phased launch will begin on 4 October.
  • 5 July - The BBC Trust rejects BBC plans to close the digital station 6 Music saying there is not a strong enough case for closure. However, plans to axe the Asian Network, reduce the BBC online services by 25% and close the teenage service Blast! are given the go-ahead.
  • 15 July - Senior BBC World Service executive Gwyneth Williams is appointed the next Controller of BBC Radio 4. She will succeed Mark Damazer in the autumn.
  • 17 August - It is announced that Simon Bates will leave Classic FM after 13 years to join Smooth Radio as its new national breakfast presenter from January 2011.
  • 3 September - BBC Radio 2 announces that Dawn Patrol presenter Sarah Kennedy is leaving the network after 17 years. By then she had been absent from the show for several weeks, and would not return to the programme before the schedules were reorganised in October. Lynn Parsons acts as the show's stand-in presenter for its remaining time on air.
  • 2 October - Comedian Graham Norton takes over the Saturday morning show on Radio 2 (10am-1pm) formerly hosted by Jonathan Ross.
  • 4 October - Smooth Radio launches its new national station.
  • 31 October - Tony Blackburn presents his final Weekend Breakfast Show for Smooth Radio.
  • 5 November - Members of the National Union of Journalists at the BBC begin a 48-hour strike in a dispute over proposed changes to the Corporation's pension scheme. Programmes affected include the Today programme on Radio 4.
  • 6 November - Tony Blackburn joins Radio 2 replacing Dale Winton as the regular host of the station's Pick of the Pops programme.
  • 23 November - It is announced that Vanessa Feltz will join Radio 2 from 17 January 2011, taking over Sarah Kennedy's old early morning show.
  • 6 December - While presenting the Radio 4 Today programme, James Naughtie makes a slip of the tongue while referring to the British Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt that turns his surname into what the BBC later describes as "an offensive four-letter word". A little later in the day Andrew Marr uses the same word on Start the Week while talking about the incident and after declaring "we won't repeat the mistake".
  • 11 December - It is reported that David "Kid" Jensen is leaving his mid morning show at Gold to join Smooth Radio as an afternoon presenter. He will make his debut on the network in 2011.
  • 24 December - A Christmas message by Pope Benedict XVI is broadcast by BBC Radio 4's Thought for the Day programme, the first time the Pontiff has addressed a Christmas message to one of the countries he has visited during the year.
  • Station debuts

  • 28 February - Radio Plymouth
  • 5 April - Academy FM (Thanet)
  • 15 August - Sanjhi Awaz Radio (2010–2012)
  • May - Rossendale Radio
  • 21 June - Absolute Radio 90s
  • 16 July - Absolute Radio Extra
  • July - InverRadio
  • 4 October - Smooth Radio (national)
  • 4 December - Absolute 80s
  • 10 December - Absolute Radio 00s
  • Deaths

  • 17 March - Charlie Gillett, 68, writer, broadcaster and musicologist
  • References

    2010 in British radio Wikipedia