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James Cridland’s International Radio Trends: Another pop-up station, and a drone light show

James Cridland, radio futurologist, is a conference speaker, writer and consultant. He also publishes Podnews, a daily briefing on podcasting. Buy James a coffee HERE.


The BBC has made an extra station, called Election 2024, available on the BBC Sounds app. It’s not available on DAB, nor anywhere else other than BBC Sounds; and is a 24-hour election news stream.

It’s probably a good idea: Radio 4 has plenty of non-news content; 5Live is often full of live sport; and the Newscast podcast (and Today) are also good for additional information here.

I say it’s probably a good idea, but the BBC isn’t letting voters outside the UK listen to it. Curious – the release tells me that content is from BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 5 Live, and podcasts – all available to me – so there are no rights reasons to with-hold this content from a voter for Southgate and Wood Green. Yet, there we are.

(Some audio does sound as if it’s from the BBC News Channel. And if you don’t mind me saying, it would have benefited from some audio processing. Not that I can listen, obviously, cough.)

It’s another pop-up station, just two weeks after I wrote about Capital’s Taylor Swift popup. Some of the commercial operators reading this might be wondering whether this could splinter audiences and, since they’re unlikely to be measured on the quarterly radio figures, actually lead to lower audience numbers for the owners. That’s a fair comment; but conversely, they also attract new listeners to the brand, which may then follow through to the ‘master’ station; and also, they may also attract listeners away from competitors.



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