BBC Coventry & Warwickshire

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BBC Coventry and Warwickshire
BBC Coventry Warwickshire.png
City of license Coventry
Broadcast area Coventry and Warwickshire
Frequency 94.8 MHz, 103.7 MHz, 104.0 MHz, DAB Digital Radio
First air date January 1990
Format Local news, talk and music
Language English
Audience share 4.4% (September 2009, [1])
Owner BBC Local Radio,
BBC Midlands
Website BBC Coventry and Warwickshire

BBC Coventry and Warwickshire is the BBC Local Radio service serving the City of Coventry and the county of Warwickshire. It broadcasts on 94.8, 103.7 and 104 MHz FM, DAB Digital Radio and is streamed on the internet via the BBC Website.

Based in the Priory Place Shopping Precinct at the heart of re-developing Coventry City Centre, the new centre is a multi-million pound state-of-the-art broadcast centre, which is home to radio, local online, an interactive open centre and facilities for regional and local TV news.

BBC Coventry & Warwickshire broadcasts from 5am to 10pm every weekday, 6am - 6pm on Saturday, and 6am - 7pm on Sunday and airs evening simulcasts with other BBC Local Radio stations in the Midlands and BBC Radio 5 Live programming overnight.

Contents

[edit] History

BBC Local Radio in the 1990s underwent an expansion programme where counties and other areas without a local radio station were identified and five stations were to launch: BBC Radio Surrey, BBC Radio Berkshire, BBC Radio Suffolk, BBC Wiltshire Sound and BBC Radio Warwickshire.

The Radio Warwickshire working title was changed to BBC CWR by the time the station launched in January 1990. The name CWR (Coventry and Warwickshire Radio) reflected the wider area that the new station would cover, taking in the city of Coventry with the whole of the county of Warwickshire, which was then also served by BBC Radio WM. The station broadcast from a Victorian-style mansion on Warwick Road, close to Coventry railway station. Smaller studios were located in Atherstone, Nuneaton, Rugby, Stratford-upon-Avon and Warwick.

This was the description of the new station from its leaflet which was distributed throughout the region prior to launch:

[edit] BBC CWR Weekday Schedule (1990 Launch)

Monday to Friday
6am Neil Pringle's Breakfast Show
9am Eric Dixon's Really Useful Radio Show
11am Michele Guinness: A Taste of Guinness
2pm Peter McGarry: McGarry and Friends
4pm Steve Woodhall: Day to Day
7pm Specialist evening programmes (see below)
9pm John Taynton
Specialist evening programmes
Monday
7pm Matthew Carr's Country Show
Tuesday
7pm Carousel - The CWR arts magazine with Helen Garrison and Victor Garrison
Wednesday
7pm The World of Music
8pm Mel Hill's Jazz Beat (plus midweek sport)
Thursday
7pm (94.8FM) East in West - Anita Bhalla with news and current affairs
7pm (103.7FM) Richard Walker's Folk Show
8pm (103.7FM) Keyboard Magic with Chris Giles
8.30 (94.8FM) The Local Network - documentary
Friday
7pm (94.8FM) East in West - with Kulwant Okafor
7pm (103.7FM) Record Collectors - with Mike Adams & Chris Savory

[edit] BBC CWR Weekday Schedule (1993)

Monday to Friday
6am Pete Sylvester (Early Breakfast)
7am Breakfast with Jim Lee
10am Maurice Dee and Stevie Price
12pm Lunchtime with Anna King
2pm Charles Hodkinson
4pm Duncan Stanworth
7pm Specialist evening programmes (see below)
9pm John Taynton
12am as BBC Radio 2
Specialist evening programmes
Monday
7pm FEM FM with Ridanne Sheridan
8pm Poles Apart Olenka Booth
Tuesday
7pm Maurice Dee with Irish Extra
Wednesday/Thursday
7pm Mo Adams with East In West
Friday
7pm Ian Harris with Grapevine

[edit] Problems and closure

From day one, BBC CWR faced strong competition from the established commercial radio stations in the area. Mercia Sound had been an outstanding success since its own launch ten years earlier in 1980. Xtra AM, the AM-only sister station from Mercia Sound, also enjoyed high listenership since it split from Mercia and launched in 1989.

CWR seemed to find it difficult to compete for the very large audiences built up by Mercia and Xtra. It was, however, well respected and highly regarded with its regular audience.

The BBC, under Director-General John Birt, deemed that CWR was not sufficiently successful in audience terms to warrant its continuation, and within increasing financial constraints in February 1995 CWR was to close. Regular listeners were hugely disappointed and phoned presenter Jon Gaunt to protest about the decision.

In 1995 BBC CWR merged with neighbouring BBC Radio WM in Birmingham, was re-named BBC Coventry and Warwickshire and would operate as an opt-out service from BBC WM with the remainder of the schedule as shared programming. This had the effect of alienating local listeners, whilst paradoxically presenters from WM, such as Ed Doolan, Malcolm Boyden and Tony Butler received high listening figures and distinctions with three Sony Radio Academy Awards, including Radio Station of the Year in 1996.

Its studios were relocated from Warwick Road to much smaller premises on Greyfriars Road. All local programmes except breakfast with Annie Othen, the afternoon show with Bob Brolly, Poles Apart on Wednesdays, and weekend football coverage of Coventry City F.C. were replaced with programmes from Birmingham.

2003 saw the station re-labelled as BBC WM across Coventry and Warwickshire.

[edit] BBC Coventry and Warwickshire relaunches

In 2003 Director-General of the BBC, Greg Dyke, announced on-air that Coventry and Warwickshire was again to have its own BBC Local Radio station. Describing the situation with presenter Annie Othen, Mr Dyke said that the station would be added to the BBC's Local Radio portfolio:

"I'm very pleased to announce that we're planning to open a new radio station in Coventry - an area that's been served by BBC WM since 1995. We hope the new station will be housed in a modern, vibrant building close to Coventry Cathedral in the heart of the city. Alongside the radio studios, there'll also be an open centre to provide access to BBC Learning facilities similar to the already established centres in Blackburn, Sheffield and Stoke. Open Centres provide a valuable community role, so this is an exciting venture for the BBC."

He also added that the 1995 closure of CWR was a mistake:

"The decision was made under different circumstances - and now we're in a position to change it."

BBC Coventry and Warwickshire relaunched as a stand-alone station on 3 September 2005 with full local programming for 15 hours a day.

[edit] Current programming

BBC Coventry and Warwickshire has a varied mixed programming format, and plays much more music than other BBC Local Radio stations, such as BBC Three Counties Radio, which is predominantly speech-based. The local diverse make-up of the region also plays a part in the station's schedule; Poles Apart, the longest-running community programme is targeted at first-generation Polish immigrants. Other shows aimed at the Irish, Asian and Afro-Caribbean are also heard, although Asian programmes have been since transferred to the BBC Asian Network, on medium-wave in the area.

The station also runs an Open Centre at its Priory Place Centre, where people can drop in to take part in multi-media learning and creative activity.

[edit] Transmission

The BBC initially supplied two powerful FM transmitters for BBC CWR to cover the whole of the county. A 2.2 kilowatt transmitter at an existing tower at Meriden provides Coventry and North Warwickshire with good signals on 94.8 MHz, a frequency vacated by BRMB Radio in Birmingham before it moved to 96.4 MHz in 1989.

The South Warwickshire area receives a strong signal on 103.7 MHz from a 1.4 kW transmitter located at an existing television relay site on a hill at Lark Stoke, 7.5 km west-northwest of Shipston-on-Stour and 12 km south of Stratford-upon-Avon.

A small pocket of poor reception in Nuneaton was later resolved by adding a low power relay transmitter on 104.0 MHz.

BBC CWR went digital shortly after the launch of the local DAB multiplex on 31 January 2001 with NOW Digital 12D Coventry in the Coventry area with transmissions from Samuel Vale House (central Coventry), Barwell Water Tower near Hinckley, Meriden and Leamington Spa. BBC C&W is carried along with other local stations Mercia FM, Classic Gold 1359 and Touch FM.

The jingles are provided by Bespoke Music of Penryn.

[edit] Presenters

  • Trish Adudu (Weekend breakfast)
  • Genelle Aldred (Breakfast weather presenter)
  • Laura Bailey
  • Rob Baldock (Football commentator)
  • Tim Boswell (Weekday breakfast)
  • Bob Brolly (Weekday afternoons, Irish Programme)
  • Malcolm Boyden (Saturday mornings)
  • John Butler (Saturday lunchtime)
  • Clive Eakin (Clive's 70s Jukebox/Sports Commentator/Presenter)
  • Geoff Foster (Sports presenter/commentator)
  • Marian McNamee (Weekday breakfast)
  • Vic Minett (Weekday drivetime, Vic's Sky Blue Years)
  • Anne Othen (Weekday mornings)
  • Mark Powlett (Weekday afternoons)
  • Mervyn Roberts (Sunday early breakfast)
  • Monika Rozanski (Poles Apart)
  • Keith Wedgebury (Wedge's Warwickshire)
  • Wincey Willis (Sunday mornings)
  • Bozena Wilson (Poles Apart)
  • Martin Winch (BBC Coventry & Warwickshire Introducing)

[edit] Production & Management Team

Producers

  • Debbie Bate (Weekday drivetime)
  • Amrit Cheema (Weekday breakfast/drivetime)
  • Fran Daly (Weekday drivetime)
  • Susie Hall (Weekday breakfast)
  • Sarah James (Weekday afternoons)
  • Stew Kingscott (Weekday mornings)
  • Kevin Lee (Weekday breakfast)
  • Vicki Richards (Weekends)
  • Hannah Tobin (Online)

Management

  • Tim Atkinson (Head of News)
  • Tim Boswell (Weekend Manager)
  • David Clargo (Managing Editor)
  • Duncan Jones (Assistant Editor)
  • Eddie Jones (Broadcast Engineer)
  • Lucy Winch (Station Administrator)

[edit] Slogans

  • 1990 BBC CWR - Now You're Talking, The News Leader, The Sports Leader, Someone to turn to...
  • 2002 BBC WM - Across Coventry and Warwickshire
  • 2005 BBC Coventry and Warwickshire - A New Adventure Every Day

[edit] References

  • MDS975 - BBC CWR History [2]
  • Aircheck - History of Radio articles [3].
  • BBC Coventry and Warwickshire [4].

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Audio clips