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From: Stephen Hebditch <steveh@orbital.demon.co.uk>
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Subject: AM/FM #13 - Radio news from the UK
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------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *    ------- ******* -------
   * *   **   ** *       **   **    AM/FM #13 FOR JULY 1993
   * *   * * * * *       * * * *
  *   *  *  *  * *****   *  *  *    NEWS FROM THE UK RADIO INDUSTRY
  *****  *     * *       *     *
 *     * *     * *       *     *    EDITED BY STEPHEN HEBDITCH
 *     * ------- *       -------

------------------------------------------------------------------------

*** BEERLING QUITS ONE-FM

Johnny Beerling has announced that he is to step down as Controller of
Radio One in October. He has been with the station since its start,
producing the Tony Blackburn breakfast show on the very first day that
Radio One broadcast. A number of names are being put forward as
successors. His current number two, head of music Chris Lycett, is seen
as the safe choice, while others favour Paul Robinson, head of daytime
output. There have also been suggestions that Janet Street Porter could
move into the job from her current position of Head of Youth Programmes
and Features.


*** 48 APPLY FOR LONDONWIDE LICENCES

48 groups have applied for the eight Londonwide licences on offer from
the Radio Authority. These are for four AM stations and four FM
stations. The licences for the frequencies used by Capital FM and
Capital Gold will be readvertised in the autumn, possibly alongside two
new FM licences. An announcement of the winners of these first licences
is expected at around the same time.

    News
        LBC Newstalk (London Broadcasting Company Ltd)
        London News FM (GWR / Reuters / Associated Newspapers / ITN)
        London News Radio (Guinness McMahon / ex LBC staff)

    Business News
        City Talk Consortium (Bloomburg / Int. Herald Tribune)
        London Business Radio (GWR / Reuters / Associated News / ITN)

    Travel News
        LTR (London Regional Transport)

    Sport
        London Sports Radio Consortium (QPR, Arsenal, etc)
        London Sports Radio Ltd (Maison Caurette)

    Talk
        Metropolis AM (Chrysalis Group)
        People Power AM (Allied Radio)
        London Forum AM (Guinness McMahon / ex LBC staff)
        London Talkback Radio (London Broadcasting Company Ltd)

    For Women
        Viva AM (Radio Viva Ltd / Golden Rose Communications)
        London AM (EMAP Radio)

    Comedy
        Radio Barking

    Religous
        London Christian Radio

    Adult Contemporary / AOR
        Music FM (CLT / Trans World Communications)
        Radio Greater London (ex GLR people)
        London Rock Radio (Complete Communications)
        Lazer AM (Radio Seagull Ltd)
        Crystal FM (Chrysalis Group)
        Easy FM (Allied Radio)

    Alternative Rock
        X-FM (Fiction Records, Harvey Goldsmith, Pinnacle Distribution)

    Dance
        Kiss FM (EMAP Radio)
        Choice FM (Chiltern Group)

    Jazz
        Jazz FM (Golden Rose Communications Ltd)
        Euro Jazz London (Euro Jazz / ex Jazz FM staff)

    Country
        Eagle Radio (UK Radio Developments / TV3 / Enterprise Radio)
        Electric Radio (ex Jazz FM)
        London Country Radio (Allied Group)

    MOR
        Melody Radio (Hanson plc)
        London Light AM (GWR / Associated Newspapers / SelecTV)

    Ethnic
        London Irish Radio (Irish)
        Star Sound Radio (Asian)
        Sunrise Radio (Asian)
        Ace Radio (Asian)
        Radio Africa (African)
        Akash Radio (Asian)
        All Arab Radio (Arabic) (ex Spectrum)
        Apna Radio (Asian/Arabic)
        Radio Asia (Asian) (TV Asia / Spectrum Radio)
        Asiansky Broadcasting (Asian)
        Radio Britannia (Asian)
        Eastern London Radio (Asian)
        Jang Publications (Asian)
        London Arabic Radio (Arabic)
        London Orient Radio (Multi-cultural)
        Spectrum International (Multi-cultural)


*** VIRGIN LOSES EVANS, AUDIENCE AND FREQUENCY BATTLE

Chris Evans has left Virgin 1215. The 27 year old broadcaster has
claimed that presenting The Big Breakfast 5 days a week on TV and doing
the Saturday morning show has left him exhausted. With a new evening
show on Channel Four in the autumn, he says he wants to have weekends
off. The move is a major disappointment to Virgin, who according to
leaked figures from the next RAJAR ratings are not doing as well as
they hoped.

The leaked ratings give Virgin a 7 percent reach nationwide, 1
percentage point below what the station guarantees to advertisers. This
works out at around 3.5 million listeners, down slightly on earlier
internal research. The newcomer's arrival has only marginally impacted
other stations: Radio One is down 2 percent to 33% and Atlantic 252
down 1 to 7%. The figures also show that Virgin is attracting a younger
audience than it was originally anticipating.

Meanwhile, Virgin seems to have failed in its lobbying for an FM
frequency swap with the BBC. The Radio Authority has announced that it
would veto such a swap even if the BBC had not already dismissed the
idea. The Authority says that only they should have the power to award
licences and it would not be right for Virgin to get a licence that
they did not apply for. If Virgin does manage to gain any extra
frequencies from the BBC then they will go through the usual Radio
Authority advertising process.


*** LBC LOSES COX

One of the main contenders in the Londonwide licence battle has lost
its Managing Director. LBC's Charlie Cox has decided not to renew his
contract with the talk station. This is reported to be partly due to a
difference in style between him and LBC's new owners and partly because
he doesn't want to be tied down to another long term contract. Cox
joined the station from Australia's 2GB and helped to bring it back on
target after LBC's plans for separate AM and FM services went
disastrously wrong. He is likely to remain at LBC until the end of the
Summer while a new Managing Director is found.


*** NE REGIONAL LICENCE AWARDED

Radio North East has won the new regional radio licence for the North
East. The winning consortium is backed by Scottish ITV station Border
Television and will offer a primarily talk based service. Music on the
station will be a mixture of easy listening and country. Although aimed
primarily at 25 to 55 year olds it also plans to carry early-evening
youth programming.


*** BBC PUTS MORE PROGRAMMING OUT TO INDIES

The BBC are to put 150 hours of Radio Four programmes out to private
tender from next April. Programmes that will in future be produced by
independent companies include Gardeners' Question Time and Feedback -
the listeners complaints series. Radio Three plans to take around 200
hours of independently produced programming, mostly chamber music. 
Radio One's Saturday afternoon Johnny Walker programme will join the
already independently produced Adrian Juste show and a number of music
documentaries. A new group, the Association of Independent Producers,
has been formed to represent outside contractors supplying programmes
to the BBC and other broadcasters.


*** RADIO FOUR DISMISSES LONG WAVE RUMOURS

The BBC has dismissed reports that it has given in to the protesters
and decided to keep Radio Four on Long Wave. This follows a number of
press reports that a decision has been made, based on leaks from the
committee examining the options available for the planned rolling news
service. The committee will be reporting in September and a decision is
expected shortly afterwards as to whether to proceed with the new
service and which frequency it should use.

The press reports suggested that Radio Four would be kept on both Long
Wave and FM. The rolling news service would then be merged into Radio
Five to create a news and sport network and the education programmes on
Radio Five moved back onto Radio Four. Continuing to broadcast on more
than one waveband would require a change in the law, which could come
when Parliament renews the BBC's charter next year. Meanwhile, new
research by the Radio Authority in preparation for the third,
speech-based, Independent National Radio licence has shown that most
listeners don't want a rolling news service on the radio.


*** LOCAL LICENCES

The Radio Authority has re-advertised the licences for Greater
Manchester. These include the AM and FM frequencies for Piccadilly
Radio, Sunset's FM frequency and a new AM frequency which was
previously used by the BBC's GMR.

The Radio Authority has advertised a new licence for the town of
Harrogate in Yorkshire. The service will reach 110,000 adults with a
deadline for applications of the 7th of September.

The Radio Authority has re-advertised the licence for Stockport. This
was originally awarded to KFM which was subsequently taken over by
Signal Radio.

Two groups have applied for the new Radio Authority licence for
Aylesbury: Bucks Broadcasting and Vale Radio.

The Cardiff Broadcasting company is the sole-bidder for its
re-advertised licences for Cardiff. Owned by Trans World
Communications, the company runs Red Dragon FM and Touch AM.

Four groups have applied for the licence for Bournemouth, currently
held by 2CR. It faces opposition from First Coast Radio, Prime Radio
and Fun Radio.

The Radio Authority has held off making a decision until the end of
June over the licence for Derry in Northern Ireland. Just one group bid
for the licence: Maiden City FM.

Radio Tay has been re-awarded its licence for Dundee and Perth in
Scotland.

GWR is the sole applicant for its re-advertised licence for Bristol.


*** FINANCIAL NEWS

BBC Enterprises doubled its profits in the last year. The commercial
arm of the BBC, best known for selling BBC videos and cassettes and
publishing the Radio Times, made a profit of 11.8 million pounds in the
year up to the end of April. Overall the BBC is expected to show an
operating surplus of 60 million pounds for the last financial year.

EMAP's radio division made a profit of 800,000 pounds in the year up to
the start of April - up 18 percent over the previous year. This
included a 130,000 pound profit from London's Kiss FM on a 3.5 million
pound turnover. EMAP plans to expand further into radio over the next
year.

The GWR Group has announced an increase in profits of 25 percent, up to
317,000 pounds on a 4.08 million pound turnover in the six months up to
the end of March. The west country based group is one of the major
shareholders in Classic FM.


*** BITS

The last edition of Our Tune went out at the end of June. Simon Bates
is being slated to move to weekends in an autumn shake-up on One-FM.

Capital Radio are planning major changes on Birmingham's BRMB which it
recently aquired. There is likely to include some sharing of programmes
between the Xtra-AM and Capital Gold oldies services.

Independent Radio advertising revenue was up 6 percent in the last
quarter of 1992 according to figures produced by the Association of
Independent Radio Companies.

The chairman and three members of GLR's Advisory Panel have resigned
over the decision to change the format of the London BBC Local Radio
station.

Independent Local Radio stations have introduced a new package for
national advertisers. They can now centrally buy time on ILR aimed at
six different sections of the audience. The stations brought in the new
package to counter the loss of national advertising to Virgin 1215,
Classic FM and Atlantic 252.

Capital FM's evening news programme The Way It Is was voted best radio
news programme at the New York International Radio Festival.

David Dimbleby has joined LBC as a non-executive director. The station
has been refreshing its management and board following its recent
takeover.

Anne Robinson has resigned from her show on Radio Two in protest at
BBC plans to put its production out to an independent company.

John Humphrys is to take over as main presenter on Radio Four's Today
programme when Brian Redhead retires next Spring.

Heritage Secretary Peter Brooke is to ask BBC executives to look into
the implications of introducing advertising on Radio One and Radio Two.

Capital Radio has agreed to limit the discounts it gives to advertisers
for exclusively using the station in London. The Office of Fair Trading
decided such deals were unfair. In future they will be restricted to
test campaigns lasting no longer than 2 months.

SES, owners of the Astra satellites, are carrying out research into
satellite radio broadcasting without a need for satellite dishes. They
hope to be able to introduce a new system with the next series of Astra
satellites which would allow people to tune in using conventional-style
car radio aerials.

The Radio Authority earnt 3.3 million pounds in licence fees from
stations in 1992. It spent 2.8 million pounds on its operating costs,
leaving a surplus of 587,000 pounds.

Adult comic Viz has had three radio adverts banned before they were
even broadcast. Two were ruled out because they relied on the listener
supplying offensive words to fill in a gap. Another featuring the line
"more fun than a jammy bun" was not allowed because Viz couldn't
provide formal proof that the magazine really was more fun than a jammy
bun.


*** AM/FM NEWSLETTER COMPETITION

The winner of the competition to win a satellite dish featured in the
Summer 1993 AM/FM Newsletter was Chris Nevitt of Shirley in Croydon. He
correctly guessed that 36 different stations were featured in the
competition. Thanks to everyone who entered.


------------------------------------------------------------------------

             amfm@orbital.demon.co.uk   fax: +44 81 509 0729
              AM/FM, BCM Box 225, London, WC1N 3XX, England

   This is a monthly summary of stories carried by AM/FM Newsline, the
weekly UK radio industry news round-up on 0336 404550. (Calls charged at
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------------------------------------------------------------------------


