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Radio Times

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Radio Times
Christmas 2005 double issue
EditorMark Frith
CategoriesTV and radio listings
FrequencyWeekly
Circulation577,087 (January – June 2018)[1]
First issue28 September 1923
CompanyImmediate Media Company (2011–)
BBC Magazines (1923–2011)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inLondon
LanguageBritish English
Websiteradiotimes.com
ISSN0033-8060

Radio Times is a British weekly magazine which provides radio and television listings. It was the world's first broadcast listings magazine[2] when it was founded in 1923 by John Reith, then general manager of the BBC. It was published entirely in-house by BBC Magazines from 1937[3][4] until 2011 when the BBC Magazines division was merged into Immediate Media Company.[5][6][7]

History and publication

Cover of the first issue

Radio Times was first issued on 28 September 1923, carrying details of BBC radio programmes (newspapers at the time boycotted radio listings, fearing that increased listenership might decrease their sales[8]).

Initially, Radio Times was a combined enterprise between the BBC and the publisher George Newnes, who type-set, printed and distributed the magazine. But in 1925 the BBC assumed full editorial control, and by 1937 the publication was fully in-house.[3] The Radio Times established a reputation for using leading writers and illustrators, and the covers from the special editions are now collectible design classics.

Masthead from the 25 December 1931 edition, including the BBC motto "Nation shall speak unto nation"

In 1928, Radio Times announced a regular series of 'experimental television transmissions by the Baird process' for half an hour every morning. The launch of the first regular 405-line television service by the BBC was reflected with television listings in the Radio Times edition of 23 October 1936.[9] Thus Radio Times became the first television listings magazine in the world. Initially only two pages in each edition were devoted to television. However, in January 1937 the magazine published a lavish photogravure supplement and by September 1939, there were three pages of television listings.

Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939 and television broadcasting ceased. Radio listings continued throughout the war for a reduced service, but by 1944, paper rationing meant editions were only 20 pages of tiny print on thin paper.

After the war television resumed and the Radio Times expanded too. Regional editions were introduced. In 1953 the television listings, which so far had been in the back of the magazine, were alongside the daily radio schedules. During the mid-50s Radio Times covers featured television rather than radio more and more, and on 17 February 1957, television listings were moved to a separate section at the front; radio listings were relegated to the back.

By the 1950s Radio Times had grown to be the magazine with the largest circulation in Europe, with an average sales of 8.8 million in 1955.[10]

Until the deregulation of television listings in 1991, the Radio Times carried programme listings for BBC radio and television channels only, while the ITV-published magazine, TVTimes, carried television programme listings for ITV and, from November 1982, Channel 4.[11] Today both publications carry listings for all major terrestrial, cable and satellite television channels in the United Kingdom. A number of similar magazines, from independent publishers, also exist. Separate television and radio magazines began to be published from 1 March 1991, when the Radio Times and TV Times lost their duopoly to publish programme listings. However, the Radio Times still lives up to its name by being the most comprehensive source of UK radio listings in print, and also since the edition of 22 May 2007 has carried two extra pages of TV listings per day as part of a slight tweak in the publication's format, bringing it up to ten pages of listings per day in total.

Radio Times is published on Tuesdays (its publication day having gradually moved forward from Fridays over many years) and carries listings for the following Saturday through to Friday (this began in 1960, before which issues ran Sunday to Saturday; the changeover meant that Saturday 8 October 1960 was listed twice).

Since Christmas 1969, a double-sized issue has been published each December containing listings for two weeks of programmes. Originally, this covered Christmas and New Year listings, but in some years these appear in separate editions, with the two-week period ending just before New Year. The cover of the 'Christmas Number' (as this issue came to be called) dating from the time when it contained just a single week's listings, usually features a generic festive artwork, atypical for the magazine, which since the 1970s has almost exclusively used photographic covers for all other issues.

From April 2010, each day's television listed over ten pages or five double-page spreads: two pages of reviews of highlights ("Choices") followed by two pages of terrestrial TV listings (one column for daytime television, and five columns for the evening television), then six pages of listings for digital channels.

Before digital channels became commonplace, a terrestrial day's television was sometimes spread over up to three double-spreads mixed with advertisements, but this format was phased out when independent publishers were allowed to publish television programme schedules.

After television listings were deregulated in 1991, there was strong criticism from other listings magazines that Radio Times was advertised on the BBC (as well as on commercial channels), saying that it gave unfair advantage to the publication. The case went to court, but the outcome was that as the Radio Times had close connections with the BBC it would be allowed to be advertised by the BBC; however, it must be a static picture of the cover, and that the clear disclaimer "Other television listings magazines are available" be given (leading to the phrase entering common public usage for a time).[citation needed] By the early 2000s, advertisements for the publication had become sparse on the BBC.[citation needed] The Radio Times has not been promoted on BBC television and radio channels since 2005, following complaints by rival publications that the promotions were unfair competition.[12]

The latest circulation figure (January 2013 – January 2014) for the Radio Times is 831,591 (Decrease 6.9%) making it third in the TV listings magazine market behind TV Choice (1,374,813 Increase 11.8%) and What's on TV (1,049,558 Decrease 14.1%).[13]

Editors

There have been 18 editors of Radio Times to date (including one uncredited and one returning) since the magazine began publication:[14][15]

  • Leonard Crocombe (1923–1926)
  • Walter Fuller (1926–1927)
  • Eric Maschwitz (1927–1933)
  • Maurice Gorham (1933–1941)
  • Gordon Stowell (1941–1944)
  • Tom Henn (1944–1954)
  • Douglas G Williams (1954–1968)
  • C J Campbell Nairne (1968–1969)
  • Geoffrey Cannon (1969–1979)
  • Brian Gearing (1979–1988)
  • Nicholas Brett (1988–1996)
  • Sue Robinson (1996–2000)
  • Nicholas Brett (2000–2001)
  • Nigel Horne (2001–April 2002)
  • Liz Vercoe (uncredited) (April 2002–July 2002)
  • Gill Hudson (August 2002–August 2009)
  • Ben Preston (September 2009–2017)
  • Mark Frith (2017–present)

Regional editions

There are several regional editions, which each contain different listings for regional programming. All editions carry variations for adjoining regions and local radio listings.

The number of English regional editions has been reduced since the 1990s due to there being fewer variations in the schedules, such as the Yorkshire version was absorbed by the North East version in September 1993 and later added the North West version in August 2007.

The most recent of these was in August 2007 when the Midlands and London/Anglia versions were merged. The exception to this process of merging is Wales, which used to be part of a larger Wales/West (of England) version, mirroring the HTV region.

Edition BBC regions ITV regions Other channels
London/Anglia/Midlands BBC London, BBC South East, BBC East, BBC Midlands, BBC East Midlands ITV London, ITV Anglia, ITV Central BBC One Wales, BBC Two Wales, ITV Wales, London Live
South/West/South West BBC South, BBC South East, BBC West, BBC South West ITV Meridian, ITV West Country, ITV Channel Television BBC One Wales, BBC Two Wales, ITV Wales, S4C
Yorkshire/North East/North West BBC Yorkshire, BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, BBC North East and Cumbria, BBC North West ITV Yorkshire, ITV Tyne Tees, ITV Granada BBC One Scotland, BBC Two Scotland, BBC One Wales, BBC Two Wales, ITV Anglia, ITV Border, ITV Central, ITV Wales, S4C
Scotland/Border BBC Scotland STV North, STV Central, ITV Border, ITV Border Scotland BBC Alba, BBC One England, BBC Two England, STV2
Wales BBC Cymru Wales ITV Cymru Wales S4C, BBC One England, BBC Two England, ITV Central, ITV Granada, ITV West, ITV Westcountry
Northern Ireland BBC Northern Ireland UTV RTÉ One, RTÉ Two, TV3

Colour-coded layouts

From 2 June to 21 December 1990, the programme page headings were deep pink for films, dark blue for television (including the channels BBC One in vermilion and BBC Two in mint green) and a medium turquoise for radio. The day was also shown inside coloured block halfway down the side of each page, which had a different colour for each day (radio listing pages were using colour-coded logos):

  • Saturday: Red
  • Sunday: Orange
  • Monday: Magenta
  • Tuesday: Chartreuse
  • Wednesday: Purple
  • Thursday: Salmon
  • Friday: Green

However these colours were slightly different from those that were adopted on 22 December 1990, through until 29 October 2004:

  • Saturday: Red
  • Sunday: Sapphire
  • Monday: Amber
  • Tuesday: Indigo
  • Wednesday: Green
  • Thursday: Rose
  • Friday: Turquoise

On 3 September 1994, the pages had the day's name going vertical and lasted until 13 April 2001 (shortly before Easter), which saw the new cover font and the programme pages reverting to having the day running across the top of the page horizontally. The channel logos arrived in 1991, when they started covering all channels, but went with the revamp on 25 September 1999, which also changed the primetime listings from two narrow columns (four channels) to one wide column (Channel 5 and regional variations), and the layout that continues to this day:

  • BBC One: Lilac
  • BBC Two: Viridian
  • ITV: Light grey
  • Channel 4: Black
  • Channel 5: Yellow (from 30 March 1997)

Before 1997, the regional variations were at the bottom of the relevant channel listings.

On 30 October 2004, the colours were later changed the day's listings for Tuesday in lavender, Wednesday in mint green, Friday in navy blue, and from 10 April 2010, the Sunday colour was changed to navy blue and the Friday colour was changed to indigo.

Digitisation

In December 2012, the BBC completed a digitisation exercise, scanning the listings of all BBC programmes from an entire run of about 4,500 copies of the magazine from the first issue to 2009, the BBC Genome Project, with a view to creating an online database of its programme output.[16] They identified around five million programmes, involving 8.5 million actors, presenters, writers and technical staff.[16] BBC Genome was released for public use on 15 October 2014.[17][18] Corrections to OCR errors and changes to advertised schedules are being crowdsourced.[17]

Covers

When the magazine was a BBC publication, covers had a BBC bias (in 2005, 31 of the 51 issues had BBC-related covers). Doctor Who is the most represented programme on the cover, appearing on 29 issues (with 35 separate covers due to multiples) in the 49 years since the programme began.[19]

The Radio Times for 30 April – 6 May 2005 covered both the return of the Daleks to Doctor Who and the forthcoming general election.

Most covers consist of a single side of glossy paper. However, the magazine often uses double or triple-width covers that open out for large group photographs, while events such as Crufts or new series of popular programmes are marked by producing several different covers for collectors. Sporting events with more than one of the Home Nations taking part are often marked with different covers for each nation, showing their own team. The second series of Life on Mars, meanwhile, was marked by the Radio Times producing a mock-up of a 1973-style cover promoting the series, placed on page 3 of the magazine.

In April 2005, a double-width cover was used to commemorate the return of the Daleks to Doctor Who and the forthcoming general election.[20] This cover recreated a scene from the 1964 Doctor Who serial The Dalek Invasion of Earth in which the Daleks were seen crossing Westminster Bridge, with the Houses of Parliament in the background. The cover text read "VOTE DALEK!" In a 2008 contest sponsored by the Periodical Publishers Association, this cover was voted the best British magazine cover of all time.[21]

Each year, the Radio Times celebrates those individuals and programmes that are featured on the cover at the Radio Times Covers Party, where framed oversized versions of the covers are presented.[22]

In recent years,[when?] Radio Times has published and sold packs of reproductions of some of the Christmas covers of the magazine as Christmas cards.

Missing issues

For various reasons, some issues were not printed. These include:[23]

  • 14 May 1926 (general strike)
  • 21 February 1947 (fuel shortage)
  • 28 February 1947 (fuel shortage)
  • 8 September 1950 (printing dispute)
  • 13 October 1950 (printing dispute)
  • 20 October 1950 (printing dispute)
  • 27 October 1950 (printing dispute)
  • 1 August 1981 (printing dispute)
  • 2 April 1983 (printing dispute)
  • 9 April 1983 (printing dispute)
  • 3 December 1983 (printing dispute)

Radio Times Guides

Since 2000, BBC Worldwide has published the Radio Times Guide to Films, featuring more than 21,000 films in a 1,707-page book. The 2006 edition was edited by Kilmeny Fane-Saunders and featured an introduction by Barry Norman, former presenter of the BBC's Film programme. The Radio Times Guide to Films 2007 is introduced by Andrew Collins.

There are also similar publications, the Radio Times Guide to Comedy and the Radio Times Guide to Science-Fiction.

Website

The Radio Times website was launched in 1997 primarily as a listings service. In 2011, it relaunched offering a diverse editorial product to accompany its listings and television, radio and film recommendations.

See also

Bibliography

  • Tony Currie, The 'Radio Times' Story (2001. Kelly Publications) ISBN 1-903053-09-9
  • David Driver, The Art of 'Radio Times': The First Sixty Years (1981)
  • Martin Baker, Art of Radio Times: A Golden Age of British Illustration ISBN 978-1854441713

References

  1. ^ "ABC Certificates and Reports: Radio Times". Audit Bureau of Circulations. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  2. ^ Tony Currie - The Radio Times Story (Kelly Publishing 2001) ISBN 978-1903053096
  3. ^ a b "The history of Radio Times". RadioTimes.
  4. ^ "BBC - The Radio Times - History of the BBC". bbc.co.uk.
  5. ^ Sweney, Mark (16 August 2011). "BBC Worldwide agrees £121m magazine sell-off". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Preston, Peter (11 March 2012). "What price the Radio Times? Only private equity can tell us". The Guardian.
  7. ^ Chapman, Matthew (11 April 2012). "Radio Times hires Hello! ad director". Media Week.
  8. ^ The BBC Story, 1920s
  9. ^ "Radio Times pre-war television supplements - History of the BBC". bbc.co.uk.
  10. ^ "Happy birthday Radio Times: Ten of the best covers from the last 90 years". pressgazette.co.uk.
  11. ^ THE GOOD NEW TIMES ... THE BRADSHAW OF BROADCASTING: 1980s – 2000 by Robin Carmody, July 2000, Off the Telly Archived 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Conlan, Tara (8 August 2005). "For viewers of quality ..." The Guardian. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  13. ^ "UK magazines lose print sales by average of 6.3 per cent – full ABC breakdown for all 503 titles". Press Gazette. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  14. ^ "Radio Times Facts and Figures". radiotimesarchive.co.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  15. ^ "Former Time Inc editor-in-chief Mark Frith named as the new editor of Radio Times". Press Gazette. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  16. ^ a b Kelion, Leo. "BBC finishes Radio Times archive digitisation effort". BBC Online. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  17. ^ a b Bishop, Hilary. "Genome – Radio Times archive now live". BBC Online. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  18. ^ Sweney, Mark (16 October 2014). "BBC digitises Radio Times back issues". The Guardian.
  19. ^ Radio Times – Doctor Who covers
  20. ^ "Doctor Who – The greatest magazine cover of all time". Radio Times. BBC Magazines. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 1 October 2008. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ Martin, Nicole (29 September 2008). "Vote Dalek image voted best magazine cover of all time". Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  22. ^ Radio Times coverage of the 2012 event, 18 January 2012, accessed 1 December 2012
  23. ^ "FAQs". BBC Genome. 15 October 2014. Retrieved 19 October 2014.