This is a list of events in British radio during 1998.
Events
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
- 9 July â The BBC unveils a new range of digital car stereos that will go on sale in August.
August
- August â Virgin Radio launches a new Saturday afternoon football show called Rock 'n' Roll Football.
September
October
- 2 October â John Dunn presents his final drivetime show on Radio 2 after 22 years.
- 4 October â On Radio 2, David Jacobs presents Frank Sinatra: The Voice of the Century, a 13-part documentary about the life and career of Frank Sinatra. The series concludes on 27 December.
- 5 October
- A major overhaul of the BBC Radio 2 schedule sees many new faces joining the network, including the singer Katrina Leskanich and former Radio 1 presenter Lynn Parsons, who present overnight shows on weekdays and weekends respectively. Johnnie Walker also joins Radio 2 as a regular presenter hosting the afternoon drivetime show (Monday to Thursday). Sally Boazman becomes the station's first official traffic presenter.
- One hour of Virgin Radio's breakfast show starts simulcasting on Sky One. When a track is played on the radio, viewers see the song's video.
- 9 October â Des Lynam joins Radio 2 to present a weekly drivetime programme on Fridays.
- 12 October â Chris Moyles is promoted from the Early Breakfast show to present the Radio 1 Early Drive show, between 4pm and 5:45pm on weekdays (later being extended to 35:45pm). He replaces Dave Pearce, and is replaced on Early Breakfast by Scott Mills.
- 15 October â Launch of In Our Time, a weekly series of historical, scientific, literary or philosophical discussions between a presenter and three academics on BBC Radio 4. It will pass its 1000th edition in 2023 and be chaired by Melvyn Bragg until 2025.
November
- 12 November â TalkCo Holdings, whose chairman and chief executive is former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie, purchases Talk Radio.
- 19 November â Mellow 1557 closes and relaunches on FM as Dream 100.
December
Unknown
Station debuts
Programme debuts
Continuing radio programmes
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
Ending this year
Closing this year
Deaths
See also
References
Sources