A tale of two sets of radio closures

A tale of two sets of radio closures

Released Sunday, 23rd February 2025
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A tale of two sets of radio closures

A tale of two sets of radio closures

A tale of two sets of radio closures

A tale of two sets of radio closures

Sunday, 23rd February 2025
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Episode Transcript

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0:01

I'm James Cridland, the radio futurologist, and

0:04

every week or so I write a newsletter all about

0:06

radios, international trends and the future of

0:12

radio and stuff. And I also read it out for you

0:15

in case you're too lazy to read it for yourself.

0:19

And as you can hear, I don't edit it. So this

0:23

is Friday the 23rd, 2025, today. And it's called

0:28

A Tale of Two Sets of Radio Closures. Last Friday

0:33

was the turn of a number of radio presenters

0:35

to do what may well be their last radio show,

0:39

as Global ended a number of regional shows on

0:43

Hart, Capital and Smooth, which I blogged about

0:45

earlier on this year. As expected, the London

0:49

people got the national shows. It also means

0:51

the physical closure of many studios as well.

0:55

Gone are the studio facilities in Newcastle.

0:58

Leeds, Liverpool, Nottingham, Wrexham, Milton

1:00

Keynes and Fairham, which is near Southampton.

1:06

Global do look after their people well, as I

1:08

understand it, and part of that contract is repaid

1:11

by the affected presenters who've been measured

1:14

and polite on social media. A few pictures of

1:17

studios, a few wistful memories of the start

1:20

of their careers, but no angry words at the end

1:23

of their careers. And I felt for one of them

1:25

who posted a poignant picture of their studio

1:29

with a carefully crafted message. paying tribute

1:32

to all of the big names who have broadcast from

1:35

there. The first comment, are they giving you

1:38

a new studio, must have been hard to respond

1:41

to after just coming off air for the final time.

1:45

But all these fine broadcasters got the chance

1:47

to say goodbye to their audience. Some of them

1:51

had been on air for 30 years in their local area,

1:55

and they had about six weeks to continue broadcasting

1:58

to their audience and prepare them for change.

2:02

Quite a different world in Australia, where significant

2:05

redundancies have taken place at broadcaster

2:07

SCA just before the company's half -yearly results.

2:11

It means the closure of some regional breakfast

2:13

shows and many management roles. SCA isn't saying

2:17

how many. But also the closure of Triple M's

2:20

Australia -wide night show, The Night Shift.

2:23

The host, Luke Boner, did get to say goodbye,

2:26

but only just. He was given one final show. There'll

2:31

be thousands of listeners who will not have heard

2:34

the news and will be wondering where an iconic

2:37

Australian radio show and their night -time companions

2:40

have gone. There's really no excuse for junking

2:45

a 10 -year show with 24 hours notice. It saves

2:49

you no money, these people are on a contract,

2:52

and it upsets listeners. Give experienced broadcasters

2:56

time to do their goodbyes. And if you don't trust

2:59

your presenter to say the right thing, why the

3:03

hell did you employ them anyway? While I don't

3:06

like what Global is doing, at least they're doing

3:09

it right. The future of radio is a human connection

3:13

and a shared experience. Companies that simply

3:16

cut shows within 24 hours demonstrate that they

3:20

don't understand the radio business, that they

3:23

despise their audience, and worst of all, that

3:26

they're actively accelerating radio's decline.

3:30

Shame on SCA. Talking about despising their audience,

3:35

ARN's Kiss 97 .3 in Brisbane and SCA's B105 in

3:40

Brisbane are both still claiming that they're

3:43

Brisbane's number one hit music station. Audiences

3:45

know they can't both be right. Some great research

3:49

from Radio Monitor, I mentioned this last week

3:52

actually, suggesting that radio is at least five

3:54

times bigger than Spotify. What struck me when

3:57

looking at their research again is the comparison

3:59

between a track by Benson Boone, which received

4:03

15 times more listeners on UK radio than globally

4:07

on Spotify. But what's more important is how

4:10

quicker Benson Boone was to pick up on Spotify

4:13

and how much slower radio was to react to it.

4:17

The peak of airplay on UK radio was more than

4:21

50 days after the peak of streams on Spotify.

4:25

which I thought was quite interesting. I also

4:28

linked today to lots of positive data from Westwood

4:31

One and Cumulus Media about US radio's effectiveness

4:35

as an advertising tool. That's quite some useful

4:39

data there. You'll find that linked from the

4:42

link in our show notes and our newsletter at

4:46

james .cridland .net. And thank you to Phil Hagar,

4:50

I hope I pronounced that right, from Juquar,

4:53

which is a broadcast consulting firm with clients

4:56

in Europe and Africa. Phil is my latest supporter

5:00

for this newsletter and very grateful to you,

5:04

Phil, for doing that. I'm grateful for your support.

5:07

And that as a company looks like an amazing company

5:10

for you to take a peek at. You can learn more

5:14

at Juqua, which is J -U -K -W -A dot com. And

5:20

nice and simple. Next, I am speaking. I'm actually

5:24

sitting in a hotel room right now. But I'm not

5:27

going to tell you where because I'm slightly embarrassed about it. But coming up next, Radio

5:32

Days Europe in Athens in Greece between March

5:34

the 9th to the 11th. Then radio. Space days.

5:39

Ireland in Dublin at the end of March, followed

5:43

by evolutions in Chicago and Illinois in the

5:46

United States, assuming that the United States

5:49

is still a thing by then between March 31st and

5:53

April the 3rd. Thank you to our many supporters,

5:57

including Duke, but also including play it software

6:00

ad master. and Brun Audio Consulting for your

6:04

kind support. If you would like to join them,

6:07

please do. That would be lovely. You can go to

6:10

buymeacoffee .com slash jamescridland to either

6:13

give regularly or just give a one -off coffee or five. That's cool. Or alternatively, I link

6:17

to another way with Stripe in case you want to

6:20

do that too. You can find me on Blue Sky or on

6:23

Mastodon. My website has more details about who

6:25

I am or what I do. You can find that at james

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