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Not What You Meant?  There are 20 definitions for Michael Green.  Also try: R4 or Radio 4.

BBC Radio 4

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BBC Radio 4
Radio 4 logo
Broadcast area Flag of the United Kingdom UK - National
Frequency FM: 92 MHz - 95 MHz
LW: 198 kHz
MW: various
DAB: 12B
Freeview: 704
Virgin Media: 904
Sky Digital: 0104
UPC Ireland: 910
Internet: Streaming Audio Real/WM
First air date 30 September 1967
Format News & Speech
Audience share 11.2% (September 2007, [1])
Owner BBC
Website www.bbc.co.uk/radio4
Previous Radio 4 logo
Previous Radio 4 logo

BBC Radio 4 is a UK domestic radio station which broadcasts a wide variety of spoken-word programmes including news, drama, comedy, science and history. It evolved from the old BBC Home Service in 1967.[1]

Contents

Outline

Radio 4 is the second most popular British domestic radio station after Radio 2 and was named "UK Radio Station of the Year" at the 2004 Sony Radio Academy Awards for the second year running.[2] Costing £71.4 million (2005/6),[3] it is the BBC's most expensive national radio network and is considered by many to be the corporation's flagship channel. There is currently no comparable UK commercial network (nor any internationally), although Channel 4 plans to launch its own speech-based station in autumn 2007.[4] The current controller of Radio 4 is Mark Damazer. The previous controller was Helen Boaden, who is the current head of BBC News. The most controversial controller in recent years was James Boyle. Music and sport are the only fields that fall outside the station's remit. There are occasional concerts and ball-by-ball commentaries of most test matches played by England cricket are broadcast on longwave. Because the longwave service can be received clearly at sea in the vicinity of the British Isles, Radio 4 also carries regular weather forecasts for shipping and gale warnings. The station has also been designated as the UK's national broadcaster in times of national emergency such as a war, meaning that even if all other radio stations were forced to close, Radio 4 would still carry on broadcasting.[4] The station is available on FM, LW, DAB, Digital TV (including Freeview), and on the Internet.

History

See also: BBC Home Service

The BBC Home Service was predecessor to Radio 4 and broadcast between 1939 and 1967. It had regional variations and was broadcast on medium wave with a network of VHF FM transmitters being added from 1955. Radio 4 replaced the Home Service on 30 September 1967, when the BBC renamed many of its domestic radio stations.[1] It was temporarily replaced on FM between 17 January 1991 and 2 March 1991 with the continuous Gulf War news service.

Programmes and schedules

Daily Schedule

Radio 4 splits from the BBC World Service at 0520, with a brief introduction from the early shift continuity announcer. The five-minute Radio 4 UK Theme (composed by Fritz Spiegl) would follow but was dropped in April 2006 after 33 years in favour of an extension to the early news bulletin,[5][6] despite some public opposition[7] and a campaign to save it.[8] After a continuity link and programme trail there is a shipping forecast, weather reports from coastal stations for 0400GMT and inshore waters forecasts, followed at 0530 by a news bulletin, a review of British and international newspapers, and a business report. On weekdays, Farming Today, which deals with news of relevance to the agricultural sector, is followed by the Today programme which runs from 0600 to 0900. On or after the hour, a news bulletin is broadcast — this is sometimes a two minute summary, a longer piece as part of a current affairs programme, or a thirty minute broadcast on weekdays at 6pm and midnight. At 1200, FM has a four minute bulletin whilst longwave has the headlines and then the Shipping Forecast; for the same reason, longwave leaves the PM programme on weekdays at 1754. There is a news programme or bulletin (depending on the day) at 2200, then the midnight news at 0000, followed by (on weekdays) a repeat of Book of the Week. The tune Sailing By is then played until 0048, when the late shipping forecast is broadcast. Radio 4 ends with the national anthem, God Save the Queen and the World Service takes over from 0100 until 0520. There is an online schedule page which lists the running-order of programmes.[9]

Production

Many Radio 4 programmes are pre-recorded, although some programmes are transmitted live including daily programmes such as Today, magazine programme Woman's Hour, consumer affairs programme You and Yours, and music, film, books, arts and culture programme Front Row. Continuity is generally managed from BBC Broadcasting House whilst news bulletins (including the hourly summaries and longer programmes such as the Six O'Clock News and Midnight News) and news programmes (such as Today, The World at One, PM, etc.) come from the BBC News Centre at Television Centre in White City. They moved there in 1998 when the News Centre was opened to house both radio and TV news.[10] News is due to return to Broadcasting House in 2008.[11] The Greenwich Time Signal (known as 'the pips') is broadcast most hours, sometimes as part of a programme.

Programmes

Radio 4 is marked out by a set of long running programmes, many well over 20 years old. The station is notable for a varied schedule of unusually intelligent and diverse programming. Most programmes are available as streaming audio from Radio 4's listen again page for a week after broadcast, although RealPlayer is required to listen.[12] A smaller selection of programmes is also available as podcasts or downloadable audio files.[13] The BBC has announced its intention to provide an online service provisionally called the BBC iPlayer which would let its licence fee payers access a broader range of its audio and video.[14] Many comedy and drama programmes from the Radio 4 archives are now rebroadcast on BBC 7.

Continuity announcers and newsreaders

Announcers link programmes, read trails for programmes and read the Shipping Forecast. Newsreaders read hourly summaries and longer bulletins.[15][16] Senior Announcers

Newsreaders / Continuity Announcers

Newsreaders (non-Today programme) / Continuity Announcers

Newsreaders (non-Today programme)

Continuity Announcers

Former staff

  • David Anderson (left to senior management, but covered during the May '05 strike)
  • Andrew Crawford
  • Alison Rooper (left 2005)
  • Astley Jones (left 2006)
  • Pennie Latin (left 11/04)
  • Patrick Muirhead (left 9/04)
  • Laurie Macmillan (died 10/01)
  • Andy Rushton (Test Match Special announcer 1998 - June 2007)
  • Moira Stuart (left 1981 to TV)
  • Anna Hill (left ~2000)
  • Clive Roslin (left ~1990)

Frequencies and other means of reception

Radio 4 is broadcast on:[17]

See also

References

Further reading

External links

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Copyrights
BBC Radio 4 from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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