Overview of the events of 2005 in British radio
This is a list of events in British radio during 2005.
- 6 February – Les Ross returns to BBC Radio WM to present a weekly Sunday morning show. He had last worked at the station in the early 1970s.
- 23 May – As BBC staff stage a one-day strike over announced job cuts, Terry Wogan crosses the picket line to present his show.[1] Reportedly, he gives them a smile and wishes them all well. He explains on air that the reason for doing so is that he is contracted to host Wake up to Wogan and hence not directly employed by the BBC, and so cannot legally strike with their employees.
- 7 July – 7 July 2005 London bombings: Four terrorist suicide bombings strike London's public transport system during the morning rush hour (killing 56), receiving extensive media coverage. The BBC sticks with initial reports of a power surge on the London Underground until actual events can be corroborated.[5]
- 23 July – Les Ross takes over the Saturday breakfast show on BBC WM.
- 25 July – London's 102.2 Smooth FM signs a three-year deal with Chelsea F.C. to provide exclusive match coverage of the club's games until the end of the 2007–08 season.[6]
- September – A year after BBC Radio 2 stopped broadcasting a weekly edition of Pick of the Pops, the programme returns as a Sunday afternoon show.
- 8–12 September – BBC Radio 5 Live devotes its daytime schedule to broadcast extensive live coverage of the deciding Ashes cricket match.[7] Normally, the station provides reports into its regular programmes.
- 12 September
- Radio Luxembourg returns to the airwaves after more than 12 years, now broadcasting via Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM). During August of that year, the parent operating company of Radio Luxembourg conducted digital test broadcasts to the UK on 7145 kHz using DRM, as well as for a time at 7295 kHz DRM.
- BBC Radio Norfolk switches on the West Runton transmitter, providing FM quality broadcasts of the station for North Norfolk, doing so as part of the station's 25th birthday celebrations. A month or so later, stereo FM broadcasts for West Norfolk begin on 104.4 MHz FM after more than 20 years of broadcasting in mono due to an off-air re-broadcast system which was unable to reproduce a clear noise free stereo signal.
- After being acquired by the CN Group, Kix 96 and its other sister stations in the south Midlands are rebranded as Touch FM.
Continuing radio programmes
[edit]
- 2 January – Cyril Fletcher, 91, comic monologuist
- 6 March – Tommy Vance, 63, disc jockey[12]
- 19 March – John Ebdon, 81, radio broadcaster, Graecophile, author and director of the London Planetarium
- 7 November – Harry Thompson, 45, comedy producer, lung cancer
- 19 November – John Timpson, 77, news presenter (Today (BBC Radio 4))[13]
- 20 November – Jonathan James-Moore, 59, former BBC Radio head of light entertainment, cancer
- 21 December – Hallam Tennyson, 85, radio producer (great-grandson of Alfred, Lord Tennyson), suspected murder