James Cridland - radio futurologist
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September 09, 2018 7:22pm
3m
So, Chris Evans, the current presenter of adult-contemporary BBC Radio 2’s breakfast show - the largest breakfast show in Europe, by cume - has announced that he’s leaving the station later this year.
He’s off to Virgin Radio, where he’s going to do the breakfast show.
Side note: it’s the same “Virgin Radio” brand, owned by Virgin Enterprises, but not the same station. The original Virgin Radio was bought (and sold) by Chris Evans himself, but after a few more ownership changes, it was rebranded as Absolute Radio. The Virgin Radio brand is now licensed to News UK, part of Rupert Murdoch’s empire. Evans once described business discussions with Murdoch as “dealing with the devil”.
The current Virgin Radio is a station on DAB Digital Radio, and has no outlet on FM. It broadcasts - in mono - on a transmitter network that only currently covers 77% of households.
It’s a competitive market, too. It’s one of 44 national radio stations in the UK, and typically a radio listener will have a further fifteen or so local radio stations available too on their DAB set - and that’s before the obvious additional choices of Spotify and podcasts.
Virgin Radio has 413,000 weekly listeners (BBC Radio 2 has 14.9m).
So, why on earth would Evans make the leap?
It strikes me that there are a few questions here:
This is real investment in radio - especially digital radio. I hope it works out for everyone concerned.
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