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2009 in British radio

This is a list of events in British radio during 2009.

Events

January

February

March

April

  • 1 April – Ownership of Touch FM (Banbury) is transferred to Banbury Broadcasting Company Ltd. The station is renamed Banbury Sound on 1 June.
  • 3 April – Les Ross presents his final weekday afternoon show on BBC Radio WM as he prepares to retire from radio (but will return to the airwaves in December).
  • 4 April – BBC Radio Swindon, which had opted out of BBC Radio Wiltshire, is closed. The two stations are merged as BBC Wiltshire.
  • 16 April – Huddersfield station Pennine FM stops broadcasting after going into administration.
  • April – The third broadcast of Pirate BBC Essex takes place over the Easter holiday weekend. The broadcast began five days after the release of the comedy movie The Boat that Rocked which was set on a 1960s pirate radio station.

May

  • May – Orion Media purchases BRMB, Mercia, Wyvern, Beacon in the West Midlands and Heart 106 in the East Midlands from Global Radio for a sale price worth £37.5 million.
  • 7 May – Pennine FM is bought by Pennine Media Ltd and returns to the air as Pennine FM, Huddersfield's More Music Station
  • 22 May – The BBC says that Jonathan Ross's Radio 2 show will no longer be broadcast live following complaints about a joke he made on an edition of the programme which some listeners interpreted as being anti-gay.
  • 24 May – Children's magazine show Go4It is broadcast on BBC Radio 4 for the final time. 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.
  • 30 May – Mo Dutta leaves Radio 2.

June

July

  • 1 July – Premiere of the Torchwood drama "Asylum" on BBC Radio 4.
  • 2 July – Debut of the Torchwood drama "Golden Age" on BBC Radio 4.
  • 3 July – Debut of the Torchwood drama "The Dead Line" on BBC Radio 4.
  • 15 July – Radio 2 presenter Sarah Kennedy causes controversy after describing the late Enoch Powell as "the best Prime Minister this country never had" on her Dawn Patrol programme, and is later reprimanded for the remarks.
  • 25 July – Chris Tarrant presents his last Saturday morning show for GMG Radio.
  • 26 July – Malcolm Laycock presents his final edition of Sunday Night at 10 on BBC Radio 2.
  • 29 July – Conservative leader David Cameron apologizes for any offence caused after using the word "twat" on live radio during a breakfast radio show interview on Absolute Radio.

August

  • 2 August – Jazz singer Clare Teal takes over as presenter of Sunday Night at 10.
  • 15 August – Former Radio 2 presenter Malcolm Laycock criticises the network's management for abandoning its older listeners and claims he was constructively dismissed by the station, although Radio 2 denies this to be the case. Laycock resigned from his position following a long-running dispute with his producer over the content of his show, and because of issues regarding his salary.
  • August – London station Club Asia goes into administration and is taken over by the Litt Corporation, owners of rival station Sunrise Radio. The station is relaunched as Buzz Asia.

September

  • 14 September – All programmes, apart from weekday/Saturday breakfast and Sunday afternoons, are networked across the KMFM network
  • 18 September – Jo Whiley presents her final weekday program for BBC Radio 1.
  • 21 September – Fearne Cotton takes over Jo Whiley's old mid-morning show on Radio 1.
  • 27 September – Reggie Yates becomes the sole presenter of The Official Chart.

October

  • No events

November

December

  • 1 December – Touch Radio is rebranded to Touch FM.
  • 7 December – Les Ross returns to the airwaves when he becomes the presenter of the Big City Breakfast Show on Birmingham's Big City Radio 89.1.
  • 13 December – Emma Forbes announces that she is to leave her Radio 2 Sunday morning show.
  • 18 December – After 27 years, Sir Terry Wogan presents his final breakfast show on BBC Radio 2.
  • 25 December – Tom Binns cuts off a broadcast of the Queen's Speech while presenting a Christmas Day show on Birmingham's BRMB with the comment "two words: bore ing", an action that leads to him being sacked from the station.

Unknown

  • Aston FM in Birmingham changes its name to Big City Radio.

Station debuts

Programme debuts

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

  • 5 April – Sounds of the 70s (2000–2008, 2009–Present)

Continuing radio programmes

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Ending this year

Closing this year

Deaths

  • 29 January – Bill Frindall, 69, sportscaster and statistician
  • 22 June – Steve Race, 88, pianist-composer and radio presenter
  • 29 August – Simon Dee, 74, disc jockey and television interviewer
  • 29 October – Norman Painting, 85, actor
  • 8 November – Malcolm Laycock, 71, music broadcaster and producer
  • 31 December – John Cushnie, 66, Northern Ireland landscape designer and gardening broadcaster

References