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Timeline of BBC Radio 4

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A timeline of notable events relating to BBC Radio 4, a British national radio station which began broadcasting in September 1967.

1960s

[edit]
  • 1968
    • No events.
  • 1969
    • 10 July – The BBC publishes a report called "Broadcasting in the Seventies" proposing the reorganisation of programmes on the national networks and replacing regional broadcasting on BBC Radio 4 with BBC Local Radio.

1970s

[edit]
  • 1971
    • 4 November – Radio 4 (and Radio 2) begin broadcasting in stereo in South East England. Stereo was rolled out to the rest of the country over subsequent years.[3]
  • 1978
    • 3 April – Permanent radio broadcasts of proceedings in the House of Commons begin.[9] Radio 4 marks the first day with an afternoon of live coverage.[10] The station goes on to broadcast Prime Minister's Questions for the next year.
    • 3 July – Changes are made to the station's weekday breakfast schedule. After just over a year on air, Up to the Hour is cancelled. Consequently, Today once again becomes a continuous two-hour programme. Also, a new weekday 6 am News Briefing is introduced.
    • 23 November
      • Radio 4's AM service moves from medium wave to 1500m (200 kHz) long wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception, and to conform with the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975.[11] However long wave reception is not universal so in some parts of the UK where long wave reception is poor, filler transmitters on MW are used.
      • The shipping forecast transfers from BBC Radio 2 to BBC Radio 4 so that the forecast can continue to be broadcast on long wave.
      • The Radio 4 UK Theme is used for the first time to coincide with the network becoming a fully national service for the first time and to mark this the station is officially known as Radio 4 UK.
    • 22 December – Industrial action at the BBC by the ABS union, which started the previous day, extends to radio when the radio unions join their television counterparts by going on strike, forcing the BBC to merge its four national radio networks into one national radio station from 4pm and called it the BBC All Network Radio Service. The strike is settled shortly before 10 pm on Friday 22 December 1978, with the unions and BBC management reaching an agreement at the British government's industrial disputes arbitration service ACAS.[12][13][14][15]

1980s

[edit]
  • 1980
    • Summer – Due to the continued expansion of BBC Local Radio, regional opt-out programming ends, apart from in the south west as this is now the only part of England still without any BBC local station.
  • 1981
    • No events.
  • 1982
    • 10 September – After 32 years on air, Listen with Mother is broadcast for the final time. It is replaced three days later by a shorter five minute lunchtime programme called Listening Corner which is transmitted on FM only whilst long wave listeners receive the lunchtime shipping forecast.
    • 31 December – The last regional opt-out programming ends when the final edition of Morning Sou'West is broadcast ahead of the forthcoming launch of BBC Radio Devon and BBC Radio Cornwall.
  • 1983
    • 1 February – In Business is broadcast for the first time.
  • 1984
    • 5 April – Radio 4 begins what is described in Radio Times as "a new three-hour sequence – a six-month broadcast experiment in which you are invited to participate." The programme is called Rollercoaster and is presented by Richard Baker.[17] The "Grand Finale of Radio 4's rollicking rolling experiment" takes place on 27 September [18] and was not repeated.
    • 27 July – David Jacobs chairs Any Questions? for the final time.
    • 14 September – John Timpson chairs Any Questions? for the first time.
    • 29 September
      • The post-midnight Shipping Forecast starts being broadcast 18 minutes later than before, moving to a start-time of 00:33.
      • Radio 4 starts broadcasting 30 minutes earlier at the weekend when it launches a 20-minute Prelude, described as “a musical start to your weekend listening”.[19] Consequently, the station is now on air every day from just before 06:00 until 00:30.
      • The Radio 4 UK branding is dropped and the station is now officially simply known as Radio 4.
  • 1985
    • 28 June – The final weeknight Study on 4 broadcast takes place.
    • 29 June – Study on 4 is renamed Options and from this date all of BBC Radio's adult educational programming is now broadcast on weekend afternoons.[20] The programmes continue to be broadcast only on VHF/FM. This means that Radio 4's output on weeknights between 11pm and 11:30 pm – ie all of The World Tonight and The Financial World Tonight – are now also broadcast on VHF/FM.
    • 25 July–8 August – During the 1985 school summer holidays, Radio 4 broadcasts an all-morning children's programme called Pirate Radio 4 on Thursday mornings. Three editions of the programme are aired. It is broadcast on VHF/FM only with the usual Radio 4 schedule continuing on long wave. The programme returns the following summer for three more editions.

1990s

[edit]
  • 1990
    • 23 June – Ahead of the transfer of all of BBC radio's educational programmes to the forthcoming BBC Radio 5, the last edition of Options, the BBC's weekend afternoon strand of adult educational programmes which had been transmitted as a weekend afternoon opt-out from the main schedule on FM, is broadcast.[26]
    • 29 June – Programmes For Schools are broadcast on Radio 4 for the final time.
    • 20 August – The Moral Maze is broadcast for the first time.
    • 24 August – Listening Corner, the weekday lunchtime programme for small children, is broadcast for the final time.
    • 26 August – Open University programmes are broadcast on Radio 4 for the final time until they return to Radio 4 1994 when Radio 5 is replaced by BBC Radio 5 Live.
    • 27 August – The launch of Radio 5 sees the full Radio 4 schedule broadcast on FM for the first time.
  • 1991
    • 17 January–2 March – Radio 4 News FM, the first rolling BBC Radio news service is on air during the first Gulf War. It broadcasts on the station's FM frequencies, with the regular scheduled service continuing on long wave.[27][28]
    • 25 July – The final episode of soap opera Citizens is broadcast.
    • 13 September – The Daily Service is broadcast on FM for the final time.
    • 16 September
      • The main BBC Radio 4 service moves from long wave to FM as FM coverage has now been extended to cover almost all of the UK. Radio 4 didn't become available on FM in much of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland until the start of the 1990s. Opt-outs are transferred to long wave.[29]
      • A new 30-minute religious slot at 10:00 on weekdays is launched, but is broadcast as an opt-out and therefore is only available on long wave. The first fifteen minutes is used to broadcast The Daily Service and this is followed by the launch of a 12-month series featuring readings from The Bible.[30]
      • Woman’s Hour moves from early afternoons to a mid-morning slot.[31][32]
  • 1992
    • Late March–7 April – For the first time, Radio 4 long wave opts out of the main Radio 4 schedule to provide additional news coverage. It does so to provide live coverage of the latest developments in the general election campaign. Previously, additional news coverage had been broadcast on FM.
    • 25 July – BBC Radio 4 stops the week for the final time, after having done so since 1974.
    • 15 October – The BBC announces plans to launch a continuous news service on BBC Radio 4’s long wave frequency. The date of 5 April 1994 is set as the launch date.[33] The plan would result in Radio 4 broadcasting exclusively on FM.
  • 1993
    • There is widespread opposition to the BBC's plans to launch a rolling news service on Radio 4’s long wave frequency and the proposals are dropped. A new news and sport service BBC Radio 5 Live launches the following year.
    • 18 December – BBC 2 broadcasts the Arena special "Radio Night", an ambitious simulcast with BBC Radio 4.[34]
  • 1994
    • 21 February – A new weekday afternoon magazine show starts, called Anderson Country. The programme proves divisive amongst the station’s listenership over the different tone of the programme when compared with the rest of Radio 4. It is replaced after a year by The Afternoon Shift.
    • 25 March – The Financial World Tonight is broadcast on Radio 4 for the final time, ahead of its move to the new news and sport station BBC Radio 5 Live.
    • 3 April – The closure of BBC Radio 5 sees children’s programmes return to Radio 4. However, instead of daily programmes, just one weekly 30-minute programme is broadcast, aired on Sunday evenings.[35]
    • 8 April – Following the closure of BBC Radio 5, Test Match Special is broadcast on BBC Radio 4’s long wave frequency for the first time.
    • 10 April – Radio 5's closure sees adult education and Open University programmes return to Radio 4. They are broadcast on long wave only as a two-hour block on Sunday evenings. Open University programmes are broadcast between February and September with language courses aired from October until January.
  • 1997
    • 31 August – Regular programming on the BBC’s radio and television stations is abandoned to provide ongoing news coverage of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. BBC Radio 4 airs a special programme from BBC Radio News, which is also carried on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 3, and BBC Radio 5 Live.[37] Radio 4 broadcasts live coverage of the funeral six days later.
    • September – In the aftermath of Princess Diana's death, the PM programme drops its theme tune which had been in use since 1993. This had been the third time that the programme had used theme music and has not subsequently had a theme tune.
  • 1999
    • April – Roger Bolton, formally of Channel 4's viewer feedback programme Right to Reply, replaces Chris Dunkley as the presenter of Feedback.[40] [41] with his last episode being broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 26 August 2022.
    • September – Open University broadcasts cease.

2000s

[edit]
  • 2001
    • Radio 4, along with other BBC Radio stations, stop broadcasting via Sky's analogue satellite service.
  • 2002
    • 15 December – Radio 4 gets a digital spin-off station, BBC7. The station broadcasts content from BBC Radio’s spoken word archive, repeating programmes previously broadcast on Radio 4, as well as airing daily programmes for children.
  • 2003
    • No events.
  • 2004
  • 2005
    • No events.
  • 2006
    • 23 April – The Radio 4 UK Theme is used for the last time, amid controversy over its axing by Radio 4 controller Mark Damazer. The decision to axe the theme, which had been used since 1978, to make way for a 'pacy news briefing', led to widespread coverage in the media and even debate in Parliament.
    • 24 June – The final edition of Home Truths is broadcast.
    • 27 August – Sue Lawley presents her final edition of BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs after eighteen years. Her last castaway is the actress Joan Plowright.[43]
    • 16 September – Saturday Live begins.
  • 2007
    • No events.
  • 2008
    • 4 October – BBC7 is renamed BBC Radio 7 in an effort to bring it in line with other BBC Radio brands.[44]
    • 14 October – You and Yours undergoes a significant change of format, with two presenters being replaced by one. The breadth of topics covered is extended to global problems as well as those closer to home.
  • 2009
    • 24 May – Children's magazine show Go4It is broadcast for the final time.[45] The reason given is that it does not attract enough young listeners and that less than 1 in 20 of the show's audience is aged between 4 and 14, with the average age of the listeners being between 52 and 55. Consequently, there are now no children's programmes on BBC analogue radio.

2010s

[edit]
  • 2012
    • 5 May – BBC Breakfast presenter Sian Williams joins Radio 4's Saturday Live magazine programme to co-host alongside Rev. Richard Coles. The programme is also extended from 60 to 90 minutes.[48]
    • 31 May – Radio 4 announces a five-and-a-half-hour celebration of James Joyce's Ulysses on this coming Bloomsday (16 June), claiming it as the novel's first full-length dramatisation in Britain.[49]
    • 5 September – It is announced that continuity announcers Charlotte Green and Harriet Cass are to take voluntary redundancy as the BBC cuts the announcing team for the station from twelve to ten.[50][51] Both had been with Radio 4 since the 1970s. Charlotte leaves in January 2013,[52] with Harriet departing two months later.[53]
  • 2014
    • 31 January – It is announced that Archers spin-off Ambridge Extra which has been on air since 2011, is to be "rested".[54]
    • 5 March – It is announced that Mark Lawson will step down as presenter of Radio 4's Front Row after 16 years as its host.[55]
  • 2016
    • No events.

2020s

[edit]
  • 2020
    • 30 January – Sarah Sands announces she is standing down as editor of BBC Radio 4's The Today Programme after three years in the post.[75]
    • 30 April – The British Library is to archive hundreds of essays submitted to BBC Radio 4's PM programme by listeners detailing their coronavirus experiences. The Covid Chronicles, launched in March, has seen listeners submit their accounts of their lives during the lockdown restrictions, some of which have been broadcast.[76]
    • 1 June – An episode of Radio 4's The Infinite Monkey Cage becomes the first BBC programme to be recorded with a live audience at home.[77]
    • 1 October – Dame Jenni Murray presents her final edition of Woman's Hour.[78]
    • 31 December – Jane Garvey presents her final edition of Woman's Hour.[79]
  • 2021
    • 4 January – Emma Barnett takes over as presenter of Woman's Hour, presenting the programme on Monday to Thursday.[80]
    • 15 January
      • Anita Rani joins BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour to present the programme's Friday and Saturday editions.[81]
      • 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.[82] They replace Mariella Frostrup who had presented the programme since 2003.
    • 9–11 April – Following the death of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, BBC Radio 4 abandons half its regular Friday, Saturday, and Sunday weekend programming in favour of simulcasting the BBC Radio News special programme and from 4pm the station broadcasts a revised schedule for the rest of the day and over the weekend.
    • 17 May – BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour is extended from 45 minutes to a full hour.[83]
    • 6 September – Sue Perkins takes over as the permanent host of Just a Minute.
  • 2022
    • 26 May – BBC Director-General Tim Davie announces plans for an annual £500m of savings that will see the closure of BBC Radio 5 Live's medium wave service, BBC Radio 4's long wave service and BBC Radio 4 Extra. There are also changes to local radio, with plans for shared content and the cancellation of some programmes that are not drawing a large enough audience.[84]
    • 8–19 September – Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, BBC Radio 4 abandons some of its regular scheduled programming in favour of simulcasting a BBC Radio News special programme on the day of her death. The station broadcasts a revised schedule from 9 to 11 September and on 19 September the day of the funeral.
    • 14 October – Andrea Catherwood succeeds Roger Bolton as presenter of Radio 4's Feedback.[85]
  • 2023
    • 30 May – The BBC announces its plans to switch off the station's long wave frequency sometime in 2024[86] and a campaign to migrate remaining long wave listeners to other outlets begins.
    • 31 July – Test Match Special is broadcast for the final time on Radio 4 long wave after 30 summer seasons of cricket commentary on that frequency.
  • 2024
  • 24 July – BBC Radio 4 LW now no longer shows up on BBC Sounds due to the schedule being the same as the output on FM.[92]
  • 15 October - It was announced that the early-morning News Briefing would be scrapped.[93]
  • 2025
    • 30 June – The cessation of the usage of Radio 4's long wave frequencies for the radio teleswitching service is due to happen, and it is expected that BBC Radio 4 will switch off its long wave transmitters on, or shortly after, this date.[94][95][96]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ The World Tonight, 6 April 2020, 50 years after the first broadcast, with references to the anniversary at the start and from 42:57
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  87. ^ End of an era for BBC despite Long Wave reprieve
  88. ^ End of an era for BBC despite Long Wave reprieve
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