2022 in British radio

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This is a list of events taking place in 2022 relating to radio in the United Kingdom.

Events[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

  • 1 February – The BBC confirms that some radio content from BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 5 Live will be made exclusive to the BBC Sounds app for 28 days before becoming more widely available.[46]
  • 2 February –
  • 3 February – RAJAR releases its figures for the fourth quarter of 2021, indicating that one billion hours of radio were listened to during that time by roughly 49.5 million adults who listened for an average of 20.3 hours per week.[49]
  • 4 February –
  • 6 February – Scala Radio launches The Classic Comedy Club, a four-part series in which comedians Isy Suttie, Sindhu Vee, Maisie Adam and Andy Parsons each present their own show, curating a playlist of music that makes them happy.[53]
  • 7 February –
    • BBC Radio 2 launches 21st Century Folk in partnership with local BBC radio stations, an initiative to capture the essence of life in the North East of England in 2022.[54]
    • It is confirmed that a limited number of commercials will shortly begin airing on Virgin Radio's The Chris Evans Breakfast Show, which has been ad-free since its launch in 2019. Times Radio also plans to introduce commercials for the first time since its launch.[55]
    • Radio Today reports on Shaun Keaveny's return to radio, with the launch of Shaun Keaveny's Creative Cul-de-sac, a podcast on his Patreon page beginning on this date; Keaveny has also launched his own radio station, Community Garden Radio, through the page.[56]
  • 9 February –
    • Figures released by industry body Radiocentre reveal commercial radio took £718.7 million in advertising revenue during 2021, the highest annual revenue to date.[57]
    • Launch of The Radio Academy Podcast, a weekly podcast presented by Roisin Hastie that will look at radio and audio projects.[58]
  • 10 February –
  • 12 February – A new study by radio manufacturer Pure highlights the increase of people tuning into radio, which they regard as a trusted source of breaking news and instant information.[62]
  • 13 February –
    • Reality television star Sam Thompson joins Hits Radio to present Sunday morning breakfast.[63]
    • The Community Media Association launches "Radiole", an online word game to celebrate World Radio Day 2022.[64]
  • 14 February – Fun Kids hosts a live event from London's Royal Greenwich Observatory during which a love letter from Earth is broadcast both nationwide and into space.[65] The event earns the station the Guinness World Record title for the First Radio Programme Beamed into Deep Space.[66]
  • 15 February – Sixteen-year-old Josh Holmes-Bright, a presenter on Caroline Community Radio, joins Radio Caroline after being approached by station bosses who heard him presenting on the community station.[67]
  • 16 February – The online output of Bauer Radio's stations goes down for around half an hour just before 8am because of an internal update to their streaming service.[68]
  • 17 February – Ofcom awards grants totalling £390,689 to 26 community radio stations for projects.[69]
  • 18 February –
    • Nation Radio gains nearly half a million listeners for the fourth quarter of 2021 after RAJAR reattributes some of the listening figures for that period from national to local services.[70]
    • Former Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson joins Times Radio to present the Friday afternoon show.[71]
    • Chris Moyse, managing director and Station Manager at Park Radio since 2010, announces his intention to step down from the roles in order to concentrate on new projects.[72]
  • 19 February – Talksport exclusively broadcasts the boxing match between Amir Khan and Kell Brook, held in Manchester.[73]
  • 20 February –
    • David Jensen's Jazz returns to Jazz FM for a second series.[74]
    • Moray Firth Radio celebrates its 40th anniversary on air with a three-hour programme featuring some past presenters, including Gary Spence, who returns to the station to present the show.[75]
  • 21 February – Ofcom finds Leicester-based community radio station Takeover Radio in breach of its key commitments for failing to provide enough original content.[76]
  • 22 February –
  • 24 February – Union JACK Radio, Union JACK Dance and Union JACK Rock disappear from the national SDL DAB multiplex at midnight. No explanation is given for their disappearance and Ofcom says it has not revoked their licences. The stations continue to be available online.[79]
  • 25–27 February – BBC Radio 5 Live drops some non-news and sport shows, such as Kermode and Mayo's Film Review, to provide extended coverage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The shows are instead released as podcasts on BBC Sounds.[80]
  • 27 February – Lyca Radio and Lyca Gold broadcast a special ten hour programme featuring the 100 Greatest Bollywood Love Songs as voted for by their listeners.[81]
  • 28 February –
    • Radio 1 presenter Jordan North begins a challenge to row 100 miles of canals between London and Burnley to raise money for Comic Relief.[82]
    • AIR 107.2, the community station for Weymouth and Portland, increases its output to 100 watts with the switch on of a new transmitter that was funded by Weymouth Town Council; its previous output had been 25 watts.[83]

March[edit]

April[edit]

  • 1 April –
  • 3 April –
    • Zoe Ball presents Wogan: In His Own Words, a Radio 2 documentary marking the 50th anniversary of Sir Terry Wogan's first breakfast show on the network. It includes excerpts of an in-depth television interview he recorded with a BBC South reporter in 1980 during which he spoke candidly about his life and career. Prior to its transmission on Radio 2 the documentary is also made available on BBC Sounds from 1 April.[124][125]
    • Talksport broadcasts the Manchester Remembers charity football match, held to mark the fifth anniversary of the Manchester Arena bombing.[126]
  • 4 April – Broadcaster Huw Stephens and Cardiff singer-songwriter Aleighcia Scott take over as presenters of the Evening Show on BBC Radio Wales, with Stephens presenting the programme from Mondays to Wednesdays and Scott presenting on Thursdays.[127]
  • 7 April –
  • 8 April –
    • The Radio Today website reports that Ofcom have confirmed the closure of Scottish Sun Hits, Scottish Sun Chilled and Scottish Sun 80s, all of which disappeared from DAB the previous week; their website has also been taken down.[130]
    • BBC Radio 2 celebrates the launch of its BBC Sounds service Radio 2 90s with a day of 90s music. Radio 1 Happy has also launched on Sounds. In the coming weeks the services will be joined by ten others: The Reset, Amplified, Total Rewind, Rap Unlocked, Artist Icons, Pre-Party, Pop Right Now, Charged Up, Soothing Sleep and Radio 1 Anthems.[131]
  • 11 April –
    • Former Sky News presenter Adam Boulton joins Times Radio to present the week's Drivetime programme as cover for John Pienaar.[132]
    • Nation Radio's schedule is overhauled in a bid to refresh the station. The changes include Russ Williams presenting weekday afternoons, and Neil Fox presenting his Jukebox show on weekday evenings.[133]
    • The Radio Today website reports on the launch of Eirewave, a rock and pop station based in Belfast. The station will become available on DAB in Glasgow from May, and plans to join other DAB multiplexes.[134]
    • Details of the first major weeknight programme to appear on TalkTV and talkRADIO are revealed. The News Desk will be an hour-long news and current affairs programme presented by Tom Newton Dunn.[135]
    • The inaugural recipients of the BBC's Radio Indie Development Fund are announced.[136]
  • 14 April –
  • 19 April –
  • 20 April – Talkradio announces a new schedule ahead of the launch of TalkTV, which includes the addition of Daisy McAndrew to its presenting team.[143]
  • 21 April –
  • 23–24 April – David Tennant portrays Macbeth in a Radio 4 production of the Scottish Play to coincide with William Shakespeare's birthday.[146]
  • 24 April – Alan Robson MBE presents his final edition of his talk show, Alan Robson's Night Owls, on Greatest Hits Radio in the North East after being on air for 50 years.[147]
  • 25 April –
    • Launch of talkTV with a limited television output and a daytime schedule mostly simulcast from talkRADIO.[148] The launch night includes the first edition of Piers Morgan Uncensored featuring an appearance by former US President Donald Trump.[149]
    • Nicola Lashley joins Viking FM to present breakfast alongside Alex Duffy.[150]
    • BBC Radio 1 and Capital both confirm Harry Styles will be part of the line up at their respective forthcoming music events. He will be part of Radio 1's Big Weekend in Coventry on 29 May and Capital's Summertime Ball at Wembley Stadium on 12 June.[151]
  • 26 April –
    • Virgin Radio UK announces schedule changes ready for the summer, and the return of Virgin Radio Pride.[152]
    • KISS announces a partnership with the Rio Ferdinand Foundation to raise awareness and drive change in the way young people are supported in building their futures.[153]
    • BBC Three airs the documentary Tim Westwood: Abuse of Power in which several women allege that Capital Xtra and former Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood committed sexual misconduct and abused his position in the music industry.[154]
  • 27 April – Tim Westwood steps down from his Capital Xtra programme "until further notice" following allegations of sexual misconduct.[155]
  • 28 April – The Virgin Radio UK Big Thank You Tour comes to an end with a gig at Wembley featuring the Kaiser Chiefs, The Fratellis, The Feeling, David Gray, Ash, Newton Faulkner, The Vaccines, Isaac Stuart, The Wild Things, Tom Grennan and Tom Walker. The tour, a free concert for key workers, has also seen events take place in Glasgow and Manchester.[156]
  • 29 April –

May[edit]

  • 2 May –
  • 3 May –
    • The 2022 Audio and Radio Industry Awards are held at London's Adelphi Theatre, where the late Janice Long is honoured with the inaugural Pioneer Award for her work in radio.[161] Hits Radio is named UK Station or Network of the Year.[162] The night also attracts controversy after an anonymous group of producers and podcasters criticises the nomination of the documentary Nolan Investigates, claiming it "perpetuates a narrative" that creating a safe world for trans people is a "divisive issue".[163]
    • Fix Radio begins broadcasting nationwide after launching on the SDL Multiplex.[164]
  • 4 May –
    • TuneIn is reported to have started removing some UK radio stations from its platform over a court ruling about music licensing.[165]
    • Lyca Radio and Lyca Gold are named exclusive radio partners of the Eid In Trafalgar Square event to be held on Saturday 7 May.[166]
  • 6 May –
    • Neev Spencer joins Magic Radio to present the Friday evening show from 7–10pm, and Saturday Soul from 4–7pm.[167]
    • The BBC announces that YouTuber and comedian Hashu Mohammed, also known as Smashbengali, will replace Harpz Kaur as host of the BBC Asian Network's Weekend Breakfast show from 11 June.[168]
    • Boom Radio presenter David Hamilton reveals on air that he has been diagnosed with polycythaemia vera, a rare form of blood cancer that he describes as "not curable but treatable", and says he will continue to present his six-days-a-week show.[169]
  • 10 May –
    • Ofcom finds Leicester-based station Radio2Funky in breach of its Key Commitments for delivering 63 hours of original content in a week, rather than the required 70, following a listener complaint.[170]
    • The NSPCC partners with OMD and Bauer Media to promote Childhood Day across Absolute Radio and Magic Radio on 10 June.[171]
  • 12 May –
    • The BBC announces that Emil Franchi, Ben Coley, Emma-Louise and Emma Millen will each host the Friday edition of BBC Radio 1's Early Breakfast show on a monthly rotation, beginning from July.[172]
    • Deborah James, a co-presenter of the BBC podcast You, Me and the Big C, is honoured with a damehood days after revealing she is receiving end-of-life care for bowel cancer.[173] The honour is conferred on her by Prince William at her home the following day.[174]
  • 13 May –
    • At 10:59am, over 500 UK radio stations join to broadcast the Mental Health Minute, which features contributions from the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.[175][176] It is estimated that approximately 20 million people listened to the Duke and Duchess' message.[177]
    • BBC Radio 5 Live and talkSPORT extend their rights to broadcast commentaries of live Premier League matches until the end of the 2024–25 season.[178]
    • Debut of Fun Kids Radio's Truthdiggers, a twelve-part "true crime show". The show will be broadcast on Fridays and as a podcast.[179]
    • Former Hits Radio presenter Greg Burns joins Nation Radio UK to host the station's weekday drivetime programme and weekend breakfast programme.[180]
  • 16 May – Former Rock FM presenter Rob Charles announces plans to launch a radio station for the Preston area using the Red Rose Radio name; Rock FM launched in 1982 as Red Rose Radio.[181]
  • 17 May – BBC Radio 1 launches the Presenter Uploader tool to enable potential new presenters to upload their demo tapes to its server. The software is also made available to the entire radio industry.[182]
  • 18 May –
    • Data released for early 2022 shows the BBC Sounds app with an average of 4.06 million listeners per week.[183]
    • Happy Radio begins airing on DAB in Manchester.[184]
  • 19 May –
    • The latest figures published by Radio Joint Audience Research Limited (RAJAR) covering the first three months of 2022 show a decline in listeners to breakfast shows, partially prompted by lifestyle changes brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, and an increase in listeners to speech radio stations such as Times Radio and Talkradio. The show to attract the greatest number of listeners during the first three months of 2022 is Ken Bruce's mid-morning show on Radio 2, which was heard over that period by a weekly average of 8.4 million listeners.[185] The figures also show that Boom Radio increased its listenership by 20%, attaining an average of 290,000 weekly listeners.[186]
    • Debut of Radio 4's new series DMs Are Open featuring audio sketches submitted by listeners. The show is in the same vein as Newsjack.[187]
  • 20 May – Heart 00s launches at 06:00 on the national DAB D1 multiplex. As a result, Capital Xtra Reloaded is removed from the multiplex. The station remains available on DAB in London, and on Global Player.[188]
  • 22 May – Writer, podcast presenter and mental health ambassador Gemma Styles joins Classic FM to present the first of two shows for the network.[189]
  • 23 May –
  • 24 May –
  • 25 May –
    • Three community stations, Eruption FM, Link FM and Mighty Radio, are found to be in breach of their licences by Ofcom for broadcasting offensive language. Eruption FM had featured a DJ comment which included swearing and racial slurs, as well as playing the songs "Shook Ones (Part II)" by Mobb Deep and "Shutterbugg" by Big Boi which had included the same slurs in their lyrics. Link FM had played "Still on Deen" by Khaleed Saddiq which also included racial slurs, while Mighty Radio had played an uncensored version of "What Time is Love?" by The KLF which contained two uses of the word "motherfucker".[195]
    • To commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Manchester Arena bombing, BBC Radio Manchester launches the "Three Ways to Save a Life" campaign to provide first aid training, in partnership with St John Ambulance.[196]
    • The BBC Sounds app is added to the PlayStation 5.[197]
  • 26 May – BBC Director-General Tim Davie announces plans for an annual £500m of savings that will see the closure of BBC Radio 5 Live's medium wave service, BBC Radio 4's long wave service and BBC Radio 4 Extra. There are also changes to local radio, with plans for shared content and the cancellation of some programmes that are not drawing a large enough audience.[198]
  • 27 May –
    • Care Radio, available on DAB in London and parts of the Southeast, is added to DAB in Manchester.[199]
    • Bauer Media announce plans to launch a subscription service for Absolute Radio and KISS, allowing listeners to access commercial free content for a monthly fee.[200]
    • The Radio Today website reports that a Hits Radio listener from the West Midlands has won £115,000 on the network's Cash Register competition.[201]
    • The RadioToday website reports that Bauer Radio is refurbishing the studios of Wave 105 near Southampton in preparation for it to become the company's South Broadcast Centre.[202]
    • The BBC announces it has dropped journalist and author Matthew Stadlen as a stand-in presenter on BBC Radio 5 Live days after his appointment was announced. The decision comes in the wake of a backlash on social media over the question of Stadlen's impartiality because of his overt support for the Labour Party.[203]
  • 30 May – To celebrate the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II, London community station Riverside Radio embarks on its "70 over 70" project to interview 70 people aged 70 about their lives during the Queen's reign. The interviews will be heard throughout June.[204]
  • 31 May –

June[edit]

  • 1 June –
  • 2 June –
    • Ken Bruce presents another All Day PopMaster as part of Radio 2's Jubilee celebrations.[211]
    • Nile Rodgers appears on Magic Breakfast to help launch Magic Radio's Magic Loves Summer promotion. The promotion will feature special programmes presented by Rodgers and George Ezra, as well as a playlist change to back-to-back summer hits whenever the UK temperature rises.[212]
  • 3 June –
    • The Friday evening episode of The Archers resumes regular broadcasts on BBC Radio 4.
    • Boom Radio announces plans to launch a spin-off station in July. Boom Light will play music from the 1950s, standards and easy listening, and will initially be available online and via smart devices, as well as on DAB in Salisbury, with plans to expand its DAB output.[213]
  • 6 June –
    • Kiss Fresh presenter Kaylee Golding joins Hits Radio Pride to present a weekday afternoon show.[214]
    • Portsmouth F.C. fan station Pompey Sound is to be trialled on small scale DAB in the city, it is reported.[215]
  • 7 June – Radio Today reports that Bristol-based BCfm is among 50 UK radio stations chosen to contribute to the British Library’s National Radio Archive scheme.[216]
  • 8 June – Nick Grimshaw teams up with restaurateur Angela Hartnett to present Dish, a new weekly podcast looking at food.[217]
  • 10 June – Scott Mills confirms that the game Innuendo Bingo is to return to his radio show following an 18-month break due to health and safety issues during the COVID-19 pandemic.[218]
  • 11 June – Tazer Black joins BBC 1Xtra to co-present Saturday afternoons alongside Sian Anderson.[219]
  • 12 June – The Capital Summertime Ball is livestreamed on TikTok following Global's deal with the social media outlet to show footage of the event.[220]
  • 13 June –
  • 15 June – London voice assistant adtech firm Say It Now partners with Specsavers to allow customers listening to radio on smart devices to book their hearing tests online.[225]
  • 16 June – After 13 years at the BBC, Radio 1 Broadcast Journalist Sinead Garvan announces she will set herself up as a voice-over artist.[226]
  • 17 June –
    • Ofcom has revoked the small-scale DAB licence awarded to UK DAB Network for the Inverclyde region in March 2021 after it was not activated, and after current owners Nation Broadcasting said they would not resubmit a technical plan following the rejection of its original submission.[227]
    • Radio Today reports that Tyneside-based station Frisk Radio has started to accept cryptocurrency as a payment method from its advertisers.[228]
    • Forth 1 moves from Edinburgh's Forth Street to its new studios at St James Quarter, with the Boogie in the Morning team walking to the new premises live on air.[229]
  • 20 June –
  • 21 June – Global Radio launches two new broadcast journalism apprenticeships linked to its Birmingham and Manchester newsrooms. The two year placements will provide a qualification equivalent to a university degree.[232]
  • 22 June –
    • BBC Radio Nottingham breakfast presenter Sarah Julian and her team are an hour late beginning their show, scheduled to start at 6am, after a technical issue with studio access leaves them locked out. The output of BBC Radio Lincolnshire is heard instead until the issue is sorted and the programme is able begin at 7am.[233]
    • The former headquarters of Heart Berkshire has been sold to a property developer and will be transformed into a 66-bed upmarket care home, it is reported.[234]
  • 22–26 June – BBC radio and television, BBC Sounds and BBC iPlayer provide coverage of the 2022 Glastonbury Festival, with BBC Radio 6 Music providing the bulk of the event's coverage.[235] By 28 June, Glastonbury content on BBC Sounds has been listened to 2.3 million times, while content from the festival on iPlayer has been streamed 34.1 million times (23 million of them livestreames), setting a record for viewing of a BBC programme.[236]
  • 23 June – Andy Carter is re-elected as Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Commercial Radio for another year.[237]
  • 27 June –
  • 29 June – It is confirmed that former England cricket captain Michael Vaughan will step back from his work at the BBC amid the "ongoing dialogue" around the Yorkshire racism investigation.[244]
  • 30 June –
    • Bauer announce it is to leave its studios in One Golden Square and relocate to new studios in Euston, with the move due to be completed by mid-2023.[245]
    • Digital radio station RB1 Radio announces plans to launch on DAB in Rotherham.[246]

July[edit]

August[edit]

  • 1 August –
  • 2 August – Research carried out by the Jaguar Foundation indicates that less than one per cent of the dance music played on UK radio is made by a female solo artist or all-female band.[292]
  • 2–5 August – Essex-based Chelmer Radio broadcasts from the south of France with afternoon presenter Roger Cutting broadcasting his show from the city of Perpignan.[293]
  • 3 August –
    • BBC Birmingham announces it will move into new premises built at the former Typhoo Tea factory in the city's Digbeth area, with a date of 2026 set for the move.[294][295]
    • The BBC announces that Radio Cymru 2's broadcasting hours will be increased from 15 hours a week to 60 hours a week.[296]
  • 4 August –
    • The latest RAJAR figures are published, covering the second quarter of 2022. They show an increase in the number of people listening to radio through smart speakers, and for the first time in 23 years a greater percentage of people listening to commercial radio than the BBC, with 49% tuning in to commercial radio compared to 48.1% listening to the BBC. The data also shows that both Talkradio and GB News, which run services simulcast on television and radio, have increase their listening percentages by 6% and 16% respectively in comparison to the previous quarter.[297][298]
    • Chris Kamara and Ben Shephard launch the Unbelievable! football podcast for BBC Radio 5 Live.[299]
    • LBC announce that Tom Swarbrick will replace Eddie Mair as the host of the station's drivetime show in September, and Ian Payne replaces Swarbrick as host of the 10pm-1am weekday show.[300]
    • The BBC announces it will hold an independent barrister-led inquiry into what is known about the conduct of presenter Tim Westwood following a number of complaints against him.[301]
  • 5 August –
  • 5–7 August – Radio 1's Dance Weekend from The UK and Ibiza takes place.
  • 6 August – As the 2022–23 English football season gets under way, the Saturday afternoon classified football results are absent from BBC Radio 5 Live's Sports Report. On 8 August the station announces it has dropped the results, read by Charlotte Green, from the programme because it has been shortened to make way for the 5.30pm Live Premier League commentary.[305][306][307] The results continue on both LBC and Talksport, with LBC moving them from a pre-recorded slot later on Saturday to a live broadcast at 5.05pm from the following Saturday, 13 August (talkSPORT has always broadcast them live).[308]
  • 7 August –
    • June Spencer makes her final appearance in The Archers as Peggy Woolley, having joined the show as one of the original cast in 1950. She is the last original cast member to leave the show, having decided to retire at the age of 103.[309]
    • BBC Radio 1Xtra hosts the official 2022 Commonwealth Games closing party, 1Xtra x Introducing Birmingham Showcase, at The Mill and is presented as part of the Birmingham 2022 Festival.[310]
    • Franz Ferdinand frontman Alex Kapranos joins Absolute Radio to present a six-part series.[311]
    • Radio Today reports that Ofcom have cancelled the awarding of the Welsh Valleys small scale DAB licence at the request of the winner, GTFM, as it could not deliver the eight transmitters required for the service within the eighteen month timeline that had been agreed.[312]
  • 8 August –
  • 9 August –
    • Rakeem Omar takes over as BBC WM's breakfast show presenter, succeeding Elise Evans.[315]
    • Ofcom finds Belfast FM in breach of its licence following a complaint that it had not complied with a commitment to broadcast a minimum of 10 hours of original content each day.[316]
  • 10 August – Bauer Media Audio launches a radio content subscription service in Norway.[317]
  • 11 August – Hits Radio Breakfast presenter Fleur East is confirmed as a contestant on Series 20 of Strictly Come Dancing.[318]
  • 12 August – Absolute Radio 60s dedicates a day of programming to pirate radio stations to mark the anniversary of the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act 1967 which made them illegal.[319]
  • 13 August –
  • 14 August –
  • 16 August – Global's digital ad exchange DAX retains its exclusive audio advertising contract with SoundCloud[326]
  • 19 August –
    • Jazz FM launches its occasional Guest Head of Music feature, allowing an artist whose music is played on the station to choose the day's playlist. The first Guest Head of Music is Emma-Jean Thackray.[327]
    • The presenting team for Blackpool's Central Radio is unveiled ahead of its launch in September, with Danny Matthews, formerly of Key 103, presenting the flagship Central Radio Breakfast Show.[328]
    • Ten radio stations whose bid to run the Bradford small-scale DAB multiplex was unsuccessful have decided to boycott the provider which secured the licence because of a belief that the winner is providing a weak local service.[329]
  • 22 August –
    • Stockport's Strawberry Radio have hired Terry Christian to present a Sunday evening show dedicated to the music of Manchester.[330]
    • Free Radio breakfast show presenters JD and Roisin are invited to leave their handprints in concrete during a visit to a new housing development in the Houlton area of Rugby as part of a planned feature paying tribute to the development's former use as a radio transmission site.[331]
  • 25 August –
    • Scott Mills and Chris Stark present their final show for Radio 1.[332]
    • Heat Radio, owned by Bauer Media, has announced a partnership with the daily news podcast The Smart 7 to launch its own podcast, The heat 7, which will launch on 5 September.[333]
    • kmfm confirms that Garry Wilson is being joined by Chelsea Little to co-present Breakfast as a permanent replacement for Laura Crockett, who has decided not to return to the programme.[334]
  • 26 August –
    • Vanessa Feltz presents her final show for BBC Radio London after more than two decades on the air.[335]
    • Roger Bolton presents his final edition of BBC Radio 4's Feedback, telling viewers he has been removed from the programme.[336] Speaking about his departure a few days hater Bolton suggests the BBC is "spooked" by a decline in younger listeners tuning in to traditional radio broadcasts.[337]
  • 30 August –
  • 31 August –
    • Connor Morgans has been elected as Programming Co-Ordinator Trustee for Bridgend's Hospital Radio becoming, at the age of 22, the station's youngest trustee.[343]
    • Bristol-based community station SWU.FM announces its intention to close the following day citing the rising cost of running the service, but its livestream continues to broadcast after its planned closure date.[344]

September[edit]

  • 2 September – University Radio York has been awarded a limited five-year licence by Ofcom to broadcast on 88.3FM to the University of York after taking part in a broadcasting trial on FM of stations which broadcast to an area of a maximum of 1 kilometre for the past year. It was the only student radio station to do so.[345]
  • 3 September –
    • Patrick Kielty succeeds Scott Mills and Chris Stark as presenter of the Saturday morning programme on BBC Radio 5 Live.[346]
    • Classic FM airs Remembering Bill Turnbull a tribute to presenter Bill Turnbull. The programme is presented by Aled Jones and airs from 10am to 1pm in the slot when Turnbull presented his Classic FM show.[347]
    • The online station House Party Radio launches on DAB in Glasgow.[348]
  • 4 September – Kate McCann and Adam Boulton begin co-presenting a Sunday morning politics programme for Times Radio.[349]
  • 5 September –
    • BBC Sounds announces the launch of its Local to Me section which will provide podcasts focusing on local topics, such as news, sport and music.[350]
    • Vanessa Feltz begins presenting Drivetime on Talkradio, replacing Jeremy Kyle.[351]
    • Omah Howard joins Capital XTRA to present the weekday evening show from 7–10pm.[352]
    • Classic FM broadcasts a concert from St Margaret's, Braemar attended by Prince Charles to celebrate its 30th anniversary on air.[353]
    • Heart and Amazon have teamed up to run an advertising campaign on radio, television and social media.[354]
    • Publication of Essential Media Journalism: The Law for Radio Podcasts & Social Media by Paul Chantler, with a foreword by Huw Edwards.[355]
  • 6 September – Michelle Donelan is appointed Secretary of State for Culture, replacing Nadine Dorries.[356]
  • 7 September –
    • The 2022 Radio Academy Festival is held at the headquarters of the Royal College of Physicians, near Regent's Park.[357] The event includes the awarding of three new Radio Academy Fellowships, to Mohit Bakaya, Karen Pearson, and Victoria Easton-Riley.[358]
    • BBC Radio 1Xtra cancels its BBC Radio 1Xtra Live event scheduled for 15 October due to increasing financial costs and pressure on the schedules of the musicians due to take part.[359]
  • 8 September –
    • BBC Radio 1 invites applications for its 2022 Christmas Takeover which gives airtime to new presenting talent over the festive season.[360]
    • LBC unveils a new weekend schedule, with Lewis Goodall and Sangita Myska joining the network.[361]
    • Regular programming on UK radio stations is suspended as broadcasters enter "obit mode" following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, which is announced at 6.30pm. BBC stations air simulcast news coverage while advertisements are suspended on commercial radio. Global stations (Capital, Heart, Radio X and Smooth) briefly play solemn music following the announcement before taking on a special programme from LBC.[362][363][364]
  • 9 September –
    • Programmes remain suspended on all radio networks following the death of Queen Elizabeth II. BBC Radio stations play a stripped back playlist of music all day, whilst commercial networks play easy listening music with minimal announcements, extended news bulletins and no advertisements.
    • The BBC Radio 2 Live in Leeds Festival, scheduled for 17 and 18 September, is cancelled following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.[365] The Last Night of the Proms, scheduled for 10 September, is also cancelled.[366]
    • Talksport suspends presenter Trevor Sinclair while it investigates a Twitter post he made an hour after the news of the Queen's death was announced in which he said racism "had been allowed to thrive" in Britain and that "black and brown" people should not mourn. The tweet has since been deleted and his Twitter account deactivated.[367][368]
    • Radio News Hub announces it will offer radio stations a free 10-minute news bulletin covering Royal events following the Queen's death and running for the next ten days, with a lunchtime and evening edition.[369]
  • 11 September – Radio 4's The Archers pays tribute to the Queen in a specially recorded scene that airs at the beginning of the day's episode.[370]
  • 12 September –
    • Alan Davey, Controller of BBC Radio 3, as well as BBC Proms, and BBC Orchestras and Choirs, announces he is leaving the BBC in March 2023.[371]
    • Rima Ahmed joins BBC Radio Leeds as breakfast show presenter, replacing Richard Stead who moves to afternoons.[372]
    • Graham Torrington joins North Derbyshire Radio to cover Late Night Love for three weeks while regular presenter Richard Spinks is away.[373]
    • North East Somerset's Somer Valley FM announces a new autumn schedule that will see it airing 100 hours of local content each week.[374]
  • 15 September – Bauer Media Audio UK has launched a radio subscription service in Finland, following similar services previously launched in Denmark, Norway and the UK.[375]
  • 16 September –
  • 18 September – Magic Radio's event "Magic at the Musicals" returns to the Royal Albert Hall,[378] with Jason Manford and Ruthie Henshall once again presenting the event.[379]
  • 19 September –
  • 20 September – The 2022 Tuning In Conference is held at London's Kings Place, with speakers including the Rt Hon Michael Gove.[384][385]
  • 21 September –
    • Launch of UK Radio Portal on Freeview channel 277, giving radio stations a chance to join Freeview Play without having to pay for a full channel. Content is streamed on the channel from internet feeds, allowing viewers to select a station to play.[386]
    • The Radio Today website reports that "I Shall Remember This", a poem dedicated to the Queen and read by a seven-year-old boy on BBC Radio Cumbria, has been viewed on social media more than two million times.[387]
  • 22 September – Trade body Audio UK urges Ofcom to reinstate BBC quotas for key radio and audio genres such as drama and comedy after noting a fall in the amount of specific programming on Radio 4 in recent years.[388]
  • 23 September –
  • 24 September – It is confirmed that Jane Garvey and Fi Glover will leave the BBC to present an afternoon show on Times Radio from Mondays to Thursdays starting on 10 October. They will also present a podcast for Times Radio.[391][392]
  • 25 September – BBC 1Xtra airs a special two-hour edition of the Official Afrobeats Chart Show to celebrate its first anniversary.[393][394]
  • 26 September –
    • BBC Radio 3 publishes its autumn schedule, which includes an eight-hour special of non stop music and archive speech to celebrate the BBC's centenary.[395]
    • Canalside Radio is found to be in breach of its Ofcom key commitments after failing to broadcast the required amount of original content. In response, the station describes the commitments as a "nuisance", a "distraction" and a "red herring".[396]
  • 27 September – Lymm Radio in South Cheshire is awarded £9,950 from The National Lottery Community Fund so that it can hire its first Radio Manager.[397]
  • 29 September –
  • 30 September –

October[edit]

  • 3 October –
    • OJ Borg presents the weekday afternoon show on BBC Radio 2, doing so until Scott Mills joins at the end of the month.[405]
    • BBC Radio Cymru 2 launches an additional two-hour show on weekdays, in addition to the station's breakfast shows and additional sports coverage – the station also begins to play a greater proportion of English-language chart music.[406]
    • Heidi Secker begins presenting weekday afternoons on Greatest Hits Radio's East region, replacing Rob Chandler.[407]
    • Graham Torrington joins MKFM in Milton Keynes to present Late Night Graham Torrington from Sundays to Thursdays, with MKFM planning to syndicate the show at a later date. He also continues to present on Boom Radio on Fridays and Saturdays.[408]
    • TalkSPORT launches a campaign to promote the football commentaries that will appear on the network during the coming football season.[409]
    • Arqiva have appointed BT executive Sarah Jane Crabtree as their Chief People Officer.[410]
    • Ofcom has received a request from Jack Media to replace JACK3 Chill with JACK2 Hits on 107.9 FM in Oxford, reversing a 2019 move that saw JACK3 Chill replace JACK2 Hits on the frequency with the latter moving online.[411]
  • 4 October –
    • Radio 2 names Owain Wyn Evans as Early Breakfast presenter, replacing Vanessa Feltz. He will present the show from Cardiff from January 2023, making Early Breakfast the first weekday Radio 2 programme to move away from London.[412][413]
    • The BBC have secured exclusive audio highlights to the 2021 Women's Rugby World Cup, with coverage airing on BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC Radio 5 Live Extra and BBC Sounds.[414]
  • 6 October –
  • 7 October – Global's Make Some Noise has raised £2.7 million for local charities following a day of special programming the previous day.[417]
  • 8 October–12 November – Radio 5 Live and Radio 5 Live Extra air coverage of the 2021 Women's Rugby World Cup after the BBC secured exclusive UK audio rights to the competition. Coverage also appears on BBC Sounds.[414] This is the first time that a women's rugby union tournament has received full live coverage on British radio.
  • 10 October –
  • 11 October – Boom Radio have launched a £1m year-long advertising campaign featuring their presenter David Hamilton.[422]
  • 12 October – BBC Local Radio launches its Walk & Talk campaign for Children in Need 2022. The campaign seeks to highlight the benefits of walking and talking by encouraging people to visit a favourite place with friends and raise money for Children in Need.[423]
  • 13 October –
  • 14 October –
  • 15 October – The BBC apologises after Miriam Margolyes swore live on air during the day's edition of BBC Radio 4's Today programme. She was reacting to seeing the newly appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer, Jeremy Hunt in the studio when she was heard to say "Fuck you, bastard". Presenters Justin Webb and Martha Kearney then asked her to leave.[429]
  • 16 October – Richard Digance joins Great British Radio to present a weekly Sunday lunchtime show.[430]
  • 17 October – BBC Radio 1 will give 100 young people between the ages of 16 and 24 the chance to spend a minute talking about what makes them who they are as part of the BBC's Centenary celebrations. The "Minute of Me" feature will run over ten days.[431]
  • 18 October – Blackpool's Central Radio have signed former Heart Drive presenter Chris Kirk to present weekday daytimes.[432]
  • 19 October –
    • Podcast Radio outlines its plans to expand to the US at its Podcast Futures event at NAB Show New York.[433]
    • Magic Radio have appointed former BBC Radio 1 and 1Xtra Editor Rachel Mallender as their Content Director.[434]
    • Bauer Radio appoints Nick Pitts, Content Director at Jazz FM, to also oversee content at Scala Radio.[435]
  • 21 October – The seventh annual Local Radio Day is held, with this year's theme being Celebrating the Sound.[436]
  • 11 October – The radio-on-your-TV service from UK Radio Portal becomes available on Amazon Fire TV.[437]
  • 24 October –
    • GenX Radio Suffolk presenter Tim Gough dies of a heart attack at the age of 55 while presenting the station's breakfast show.[438]
    • Will Manning replaces Ant Payne on Capital Drive.[419]
    • Mark Goodier begins counting down the top 300 songs of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s for Greatest Hits Radio.[439]
    • Bauer Media moves Radio Borders from Galashiels to the new Edinburgh headquarters. News, sport and weather, as well as Greg and Lynsey at Breakfast will continue to broadcast to the Radio Borders area.[440]
    • Virgin Radio launches its Autumn schedule, which includes Jayne Middlemiss presenting weekday afternoons.[441]
    • Ofcom has resolved an issue regarding a breach of licence agreement by Oban FM, which was off-air for five months due to problems securing an internet link for new premises, an occurrence which Ofcom deems to have been beyond the control of the community station.[442]
    • New logos are launched for London's Lyca Radio and Lyca Gold.[443]
  • 25 October – Absolute Radio's breakfast show airs the debut recording of its "The Band of Mum and Dad" project. Six listeners who had previously been members of bands were chosen to form a band, and have recorded a version of the Kings of Leon song "Sex on Fire".[444]
  • 27 October –
    • The RAJAR figures for the third quarter of 2022 are published, and show a general decline in the number of listeners to BBC radio but an increase in listeners to commercial stations. The figures show an average of 49.7 million adults (or 88.8% of the adult population) listening for an average of 20.6 hours a week.[445]
    • Michael Hill, the founder and managing director of Radioplayer announces he is leaving for a job in the charity sector.[446]
  • 28 October –
  • 31 October –
    • Scott Mills makes his weekday afternoon debut on Radio 2.[405]
    • Salma El-Wardany succeeds Vanessa Feltz as presenter of the breakfast show on BBC Radio London from Mondays to Thursdays, with Riz Lateef presenting on Fridays.[449]
    • Former Capital and Metro Radio presenter Matt Bailey begins presenting the breakfast show on BBC Radio Newcastle.[450]
    • Major cutbacks to BBC Local Radio are announced. Stations will only be local from 6am until 2pm on weekdays with all other programming, apart from live sport, being broadcast on neighbouring stations. The cuts will also see the return of a fully networked weeknight show, airing from 10pm.[451]
    • Radio X breakfast show presenter Chris Moyles is confirmed as a contestant on I’m a Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!.[452]

November[edit]

  • 1 November – Media minister Julia Lopez says the government is "concerned" and "disappointed" by planned cuts to BBC local radio output, which it is feared could have an impact on the delivery of local content.[453]
  • 2 November –
    • The BBC announces plans to close Wogan House (formerly Western House) in London and Bridge House in Salford, with radio broadcasting from Wogan House being moved to Broadcasting House in London.[454]
    • Global launch a new logo for the Capital network, which dispenses with the FM frequencies.[455]
    • Radio Today reports that Shine Radio in Petersfield is using recordings of local primary school children for its on air time checks.[456]
    • Radio West Norfolk, which launched online in November 2020, is added to DAB in King's Lynn.[457]
  • 3 November – The BBC announces plans to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the UK Singles Chart, with programmes on Radio 1 and Radio 2 over the weekend of 11 and 12 November playing the most streamed songs from each year of the chart from a list prepared by The Official Chart Company.[458][459]
  • 3–5 November – BBC Music Introducing Live is held across 35 BBC local radio stations, BBC Radio 1, BBC 1Xtra and 6 Music, and also includes 17 live events. It features live and on-air gigs, masterclasses, practical workshops, talks and Q&A sessions around the UK.[460]
  • 4 November –
  • 4–5 November – Pet Classics returns to Classic FM for a fifth year, with Charlotte Hawkins presenting soothing music to calm listeners' pets over Bonfire Night.[462]
  • 5 November – BBC Asian Network presents Asian Network Certified, a night of live music performances to celebrate its 20th birthday. The event is hosted by the station's Nikita Kanda and AJD, and takes place in Birmingham.[463]
  • 7 November –
    • Shaun Keaveny joins Greatest Hits Radio to provide cover for Mark Goodier's mid morning show.[464]
    • Author Vicky Pattison joins Heart North East to cover Russ Morris's drivetime show.[465]
    • Ofcom closes an investigation into Wirral-based Flame Christian & Community Radio, which had been off-air for ten months. The station's transmitter had been damaged in Storm Arwen in November 2021 but the station continued to stream online until analogue broadcasting resumed in September 2022. Ofcom deemed the break in transmission to be "outside of the station's control".[466]
    • Ofcom finds GB News Radio in breach of the broadcasting code Rule 6.0 for not providing notification of all parties and candidates standing in the 2022 Birmingham Erdington by-election during an on air discussion on 2 March. While the channel did show onscreen details of the candidates during the To the Point debate on 2 March, the same information was not provided for its radio simulcast.[467]
    • Warrington Hospital's General Radio celebrates its 65th anniversary.[468]
  • 8 November –
  • 9 November – LBC reporter Charlotte Lynch gives an on air account of her arrest at a Just Stop Oil protest on the M25 the previous day after Hertfordshire Police refused to believe she was attending the event in her capacity as a journalist.[472][473]
  • 10 November –
    • Bauer Media has agreed to purchase Cork's Red FM in Ireland subject to regulatory approval.[474]
    • Bauer's Cash for Kids Sports Challenge has granted over £1million to grassroots sports organisations in the UK.[475]
  • 11 November – Hits Radio presents Hits Live Manchester, featuring Sam Smith, Craig David, Tom Grennan and Sigala.[476]
  • 12 November – Hits Radio presents Hits Live in Birmingham, featuring Lewis Capaldi, Sam Ryder, Blue, Ellie Goulding and Dermot Kennedy.[476]
  • 14 November –
  • 15 November –
    • KISS announces the launch of ten new stations on its KISS Premium online platform, including On the Dancefloor with Tyler West and KISSTORY 80s.[479]
    • Fix Radio, which does not take part in RAJAR, has published its listening figures, which it says have increased by 80% since its national launch in May 2022. The station, which is aimed at tradespeople, says it had a weekly audience of 146,592 during October, with a collective audience of 211,092.[480]
  • 16 November – Scott Mills begins a 24-hour treadmill challenge to raise money for Children in Need, even presenting his afternoon Radio 2 show while walking, jogging and running.[481] £1 million has been raised by the following day.[482]
  • 17 November – The 2022 Student Radio Awards are held in London.[483]
  • 19 November – The UK Community Radio Network's National Connecting Communities Conference takes place at King's House Conference Centre in Bedford.[484]
  • 20 November – Boom Radio celebrates the 70th anniversary of the UK Singles Chart with a day of programming dedicated to the charts presented by John Peters, Simon Bates, Mike Read and David Jensen. The shows will include a countdown of the first chart from 1952 presented by Peters.[485]
  • 21 November –
    • Boom Radio have signed Paul O'Grady to present a show on Christmas Day similar to the one he presented for BBC Radio 2.[486]
    • Ofcom has found Felixstowe Radio in breach of its broadcasting conditions for failing to air eight hours of original content on a particular day; on the day concerned only two hours of original output was broadcast, something Felixstowe Radio attributed to factors including presenter absences and technical problems.[487]
  • 22 November –
  • 23 November –
  • 24 November – Planet Rock Presents Zeppelin Symphonic, The Music of Led Zeppelin – A Rock Celebration at the London Palladium.[493]
  • 25 November –
    • Magic Radio makes its annual switch to playing 100% Christmas hits for the festive season, the fifth year it has done so.[494] Pure Radio Scotland also switches to an all-Christmas playlist.[495]
    • Greatest Hits Radio presents Party at the Palladium! at the London Palladium.[493]
    • Following an investigation, Ofcom has resolved an issue with the Dartmoor-based Skylark Sounds which was off-air due to difficulties with its transmitters from 8–28 June. Ofcom finds that Skylark did everything they could to make Ofcom aware of the problem, and continued with their off-air commitments to the local community while they could not broadcast.[496]
  • 26 November – Magic Radio presents Magic at Christmas at the London Palladium.[493]
  • 27 November – The London Palladium plays host to Scala Radio Christmas Live and Absolute Radio Live at the Palladium.[493]
  • 28 November –
  • 29 November –

December[edit]

  • 1 December –
    • BBC Director of Nations Rhodri Talfan Davies and BBC Director of England Jason Horton appear before the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee to answer questions about planned cuts to BBC Local Radio. The committee is told that the plans currently in place may change before they are implemented.[505][506]
    • Gaydio breakfast presenters Paris and Dave begin a 24-hour live broadcast to raise money for the Terrence Higgins Trust.[507]
  • 3 December – Conservative MP and former Culture Minister Ed Vaizey joins Times Radio to present a weekly news review programme.[488]
  • 4 December –
    • Channel 103's 2022 Jersey Christmas Appeal has raised £101,193 for good causes on the island.[508]
    • The online station House Party Radio has launched on DAB in Blackpool, the Radio Today website reports.[509]
  • 6 December – BBC Radio 3 confirms that production of eight of its regular programmes will move to Manchester from 2024; the programmes include Music Matters, Jazz Record Requests, Essential Classics, Through the Night and Sunday Breakfast.[510]
  • 8 December –
    • Radio 2 in Concert returns with a performance from Lewis Capaldi at the BBC Radio Theatre in Broadcasting House. The concert is recorded for broadcast on 15 December.[511]
    • Mike Huston is appointed as managing director of Great British Radio.[512]
    • Bauer have appointed Lucy Thomas, Sky's current Group Chief Data Officer, as their new Chief Financial and Operating Officer; she will join them on 1 May 2023.[513]
    • Lyca Radio have partnered with Asian broadcaster Utsav Plus to provide coverage of the 2022 Indian Television Academy Awards.[514]
    • Sunrise Radio is announced as the official radio partner for the Qawwali Mehfil of 2023, taking place in July 2023.[515]
  • 9 December –
    • Neil Sloan, current Group Content Director at Communicorp UK, has been appointed Managing Editor at BBC Radio Wales.[516]
    • Jason Horton is appointed as Director of Production for BBC Local services across England, taking up the role with immediate effect.[517]
  • 10–11 December – Capital's Jingle Bell Ball returns to London's O2 Arena, and is also livestreamed on Global Player.[518]
  • 11 December – Jack2 Hits will return to the 107.9FM frequency in Oxford following Ofcom approval for a change in content; the frequency has broadcasts Jack3 Chill since 2020, which will return to being an online station.[519]
  • 15 December – Sonny Jay confirms he is leaving Capital Breakfast after five years to present Capital's weekday late night show from January 2023.[520]
  • 16 December – Virgin Radio 80s Plus have hired Pete Waterman to present two classic 80s Party shows on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve.[521]
  • 17 December – The George Pub in London's Great Portland Street plays host to a reunion of 1980s presenters at Capital and Chiltern Radio.[522]
  • 18 December – BBC Radio Wales publishes its Christmas schedule, which includes programmes from personalities such as Amy Dowden, Wynne Evans, Bryn Terfel, Amy Wadge, Aleighcia Scott and Scott Quinnell and his family.[523]
  • 19 December – Arqiva have appointed Gaurav Jandwani as the executive director of Media & Broadcast.[524]
  • 20 December –
  • 23 December –
    • Bauer Radio presenters across the network's breakfast shows announce that the company's Cash for Kids Mission Christmas has raised over £14million.[527]
    • Following their Christmas Present Appeal, Northampton's NLive Radio announces they have delivered 600 presents to those in Need.[528]
    • Beat the Boss comes to an end on BBC Radio Wiltshire.
  • 25 December –
    • Radio 1 presents a Christmas Day TikTok Takeover between 2pm and 6pm, with ten presenters from the social media platform presenting 30 minute slots.[529]
    • Former Desert Island Discs presenter Kirsty Young returns to the series as a guest for a Christmas Day special, where she speaks to current presenter Lauren Laverne.[530]
    • The Hits Radio Network airs Christmas. Together, a nationwide programme designed to bring listeners together for Christmas lunch.[531]
  • 26 December – Jon Holmes returns to Radio 2 with a one-off show titled Bangers: Mashed celebrating the best song mash-ups.[532]
  • 27 December – Jamz Supernova presents her final show on BBC 1Xtra after twelve years with the network. CassKidd takes over the show from January 2023.[533]
  • 31 December –

Station debuts[edit]

Terrestrial[edit]

Online stations[edit]

Small-scale multiplex switch-ons[edit]

  • 28 March – Salisbury[551]
  • 6 July – Newcastle and Gateshead[552]
  • 11 July – Edinburgh[553]
  • 14 July – Bradford[554]
  • 17 August – Glasgow[555]
  • 1 September – Blackpool[556]
  • 8 October – Winchester[557][558]
  • 29 October – Dudley & Stourbridge
  • 4 November – Cardiff[485]
  • 5 December –


Programme debuts[edit]

Continuing radio programmes[edit]

1940s[edit]

1950s[edit]

1960s[edit]

1970s[edit]

1980s[edit]

1990s[edit]

2000s[edit]

2010s[edit]

2020s[edit]

Ending this year[edit]

Closing this year[edit]

Date Station Launched
29 March All Oldies Radio[577] 2016
8 April Scottish Sun Hits, Scottish Sun Chilled and Scottish Sun 80s 2018[578]
1 June Virgin Radio Groove 2020
25 October Buchan Radio[579] 2019
30 December North Cotswold Community Radio[580] 2007

Deaths[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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