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James Cridland’s Radioland – BBC Radio overseas: a new plan after BBC Sounds closes

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.


This is Radioland, my radio newsletter.

As regular readers know, I’ve been interested in the availability of BBC Radio outside the UK. And there’s been some movement.

You may remember that BBC Sounds and access to national BBC radio, except Radio 4, was due to be turned off in Spring 2025; and that it’s still going after that plan was postponed. Well, now, we know what’s going on.

February’s FAQ on the BBC’s website has been updated (though not with a new title), and it tells us the following…

The BBC Sounds app will be turned off for listeners outside the UK on 21 July 2025. (Radio 4 – and, of course, the BBC World Service – is available free on the BBC app).

But. Keep scrolling down that page, and we’re told that BBC radio will remain available internationally – and we’re given a set of deep-links for, um, BBC Sounds. It turns out that while the BBC Sounds app goes away, and much of the BBC Sounds website won’t be available – we won’t get audio-on-demand (or “catch-up radio”), and we won’t even get to access the programme schedules – we will, as long as we know the direct link to the station, be able to continue listening live. You’ll have no app, these pages will be littered with links that will give you a “not available here” message, but the live stream will still play, as long as you know where it is.

Happily – website addresses like https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1 direct to the live stream page, so we can just guess the former radio website (ah, remember them?) to get to the live stream. Or, seemingly, Google for BBC Radio 1 live.

You can also continue using third-party platforms – like TuneIn, or this Radiofeeds page, or your smart speaker. Or, use Apple Music (which has live radio inside it, if you search).

So, an overseas listener wanting to listen to BBC Radio 3 in BBC Sounds will be redirected in late July to BBC Audio, where they will see no links to BBC Radio 3. In the menu bar at the top is a cryptic link marked “Audio FAQs”, which takes them to a page with the title of “BBC podcasts and audio are now available on BBC.com”, which if you scroll down past the news of BBC Sounds closing, they’ll eventually find some a link to BBC Sounds, which is supposed to have closed, which isn’t on BBC.com, where they can listen.

On the plus side, yay – we don’t lose BBC domestic radio. Except, this information might as well be in a dark cellar, on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying “Beware of the Leopard”; and my prediction is that almost no listener will work this out.

I’m told that the BBC will closely monitor audience feedback and engagement habits to determine the best way to integrate the links into the wider BBC Audio experience.

Mind you: in an audacious bid for irrelevance, the BBC is apparently to put almost its entire news website behind a paywall in the US. Careful – that thing you’re pointing at your foot looks like it’s loaded.


 

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