BBC Wiltshire

BBC Wiltshire
City of license Swindon
Broadcast area Wiltshire
Slogan A Passion for Wiltshire Life
Frequency 103.5 MHz, 103.6 MHz, 104.3 MHz, 104.9 MHz, 1332 kHz, 1368 kHz, DAB (NOW Wiltshire)
First air date 4 April 1989
Format Local news, talk and music
Language English
Audience share 5.0% (March 2010, [1])
Owner BBC Local Radio,
BBC West
Website BBC Wiltshire

BBC Wiltshire is the BBC Local Radio station and BBC Online service for the English county of Wiltshire. The station marked its 20th anniversary in 2009.

Contents

History

BBC Wiltshire Sound (1989-2002)

The station was launched as BBC Wiltshire Sound on 4 April 1989, with its main studios and headquarters in Prospect Place, Swindon. The station was not initially titled 'BBC Radio Wiltshire' because at that time its competitor GWR owned the copyright of 'Wiltshire' and 'Radio' in whatever combination.[1]

The first presenter heard on air was Paul Chantler. The early logo of the station featured the White Horse at Westbury. BBC Wiltshire Sound had a reputation for solid local programming focusing on news and information.

From 1991 to 1994 the station's Programme Editor was Mike Gray, who left to found the successful Kiss 102 and Kiss 105 radio stations in Manchester and Yorkshire. Amongst Mike's innovations was giving 17 year old Swindon student Mark Franklin his own programmes, which led to him being spotted and hired as a presenter on Top Of The Pops. Other specialist music presenters at the time included leading jazz singer Rosemary Squires.

One of BBC Wiltshire Sound's best-known features was the long-running soap opera Acrebury in which all the characters were voiced by presenter and actor Gerry Hughes, for which he was awarded a Guinness World Record. The city of Salisbury was given its own breakfast show for a time, due to its relative isolation in the south of the county. However both the Salisbury breakfast show and Acrebury were discontinued as part of a virtual relaunch of the station in 2000. Along with a number of presenter departures, the changes led to listener protests at the station's headquarters and unflattering headlines in the local newspaper.

The 2000 relaunch gave listeners in Swindon separate programmes from the rest of the county, introduced in response to the rapid growth of the town and its new unitary authority status. New presenters brought in for the Swindon programmes included Dan Chisholm and Peter Heaton-Jones.

BBC Radio Wiltshire and BBC Radio Swindon (2002-2009)

On 11 November 2002, the separation was enhanced when the station was effectively split into two different services: BBC Radio Swindon, covering the town and surrounding areas, and BBC Radio Wiltshire for the rest of the county. Originally the two stations had their own discrete programmes for most of the day, but by 2007, following a number of schedule changes and presenter departures, only the breakfast shows remained separate. All other programmes were simulcast on both stations.

BBC Wiltshire (2009-present)

On 4 April 2009, exactly 20 years after the original launch, the two stations effectively merged again and became a single entity branded as BBC Wiltshire. This became the umbrella name for the radio station and online service, in common with branding policy across most of the BBC local radio network. Swindon retained its own breakfast show, for which the branding Swindon's BBC Wiltshire is used.

Transmission

BBC Wiltshire broadcasts from its studios in Swindon on 103.5 (Newton Barrow, near A360, 5 miles north-west of Salisbury), 104.3 (Naish Hill, near A342 4 miles west of Calne which is for west Wiltshire), 104.9 (Marlborough for east Wiltshire) FM; 1332 (Lacock, near A350, 4 miles south of Chippenham) and 1368 (Old Town, Swindon, near B4006) AM; DAB and via the BBC iPlayer. Swindon's BBC Wiltshire broadcasts on 103.6 and its transmitter is located at Blunsdon which is two miles north of Swindon next to the A419 with a terrain height of 450ft.

The station is also carried on the NOW Wiltshire DAB Digital Radio multiplex.

The transmissions can also be heard live on the website bbc.co.uk/wiltshire.

Programming

All daytime programmes are broadcast across the county, with the exception of breakfast when Swindon has its own separate programme. From 7pm - 1am each weekday, all BBC local radio stations in the BBC West region simulcast Keith Warmington - Access All Areas and Trevor Fry's late show. At weekends, evening programming is shared with BBC South West and BBC West, including live late shows from David Sheppard (Saturdays) and Douglas Mounce (Sundays). BBC Wiltshire simulcasts programming from Radio 5 Live overnight.

Programming

Weekdays

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0100 – 0500 BBC Radio 5 Live: Up All Night London
0500 - 0530 BBC Radio 5 Live: Morning Reports
0530 - 0630 Faye Dicker Bristol
0630 - 0900 Matthew Smith
103.6 FM & 1368 AM only: Graham Mack
Swindon
0900 - 1200 Mark O'Donnell
1200 - 1400 Graham Seaman
1400 - 1600 Sue Davies
1600 - 1900 Lee Stone
1900 - 2200 Keith Warmington Bristol
2200 – 0100 Trevor Fry

Weekday variations

Day Time Main presenter/programme Location
Wednesday 0100 - 0130 UK Black: Eddie Nestor London
0130 - 0200 Desi Download: Satnam Rana Birmingham
0200 - 0230 Faith in England: The Reverend Gavin Ashenden Brighton
0230 - 0500 BBC Radio 5 Live: Up All Night London
Thursday 1900 - 2100 BBC Introducing: Will Walder & Marie Lennon Swindon
2100 - 2200 Keith Warmington Bristol

Saturday

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0100 – 0500 BBC Radio 5 Live: Up All Night London
0500 - 0600 BBC Radio 5 Live: Morning Reports
0600 - 0900 Graham Rogers Swindon
0900 - 1300 Mark O'Donnell
1300 - 1500 Marie Lennon
1500 - 1800 Laura Rowlings
1805 - 2000 The Vintage Top 40 Plymouth
2000 - 2200 Geoff Barker's Rock 'n' Roll Party
2200 - 0100 Graham Torrington's Saturday Night Love Songs

Sunday

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0100 – 0500 BBC Radio 5 Live: Up All Night London
0500 - 0600 BBC Radio 5 Live: Morning Reports
0600 - 0700 Soul and Inspiration Swindon
0700 - 1000 Lee Stone
1000 - 1300 Graham Rogers
1300 - 1400 Johnny Coppin Gloucester
1400 - 1530 Paul Moss
1530 - 1700 Manny Masih
1700 - 1900 Alex Lewis Bristol
1900 - 2000 Sounds of Brass: Phillip Hunt Plymouth
2000 - 2200 Swingers and Singers: David Lowe
2200 - 0100 Graham Torrington's Night Time

References

External links