The Radio 4 Appeal is a British radio programme on BBC Radio 4. Each week a single speaker, usually a celebrity, appeals for support for a different charity (for example Paul Heiney appealed on behalf of Send a Cow in 2008).[1] Listeners are invited to respond by sending cheques using a Freepost address, or can make payments online or by telephone. Listeners can also set up a standing order payment to support all 52 charities each year.[2]
The programme is transmitted at 07:55 and 21:26 on Sunday, and at 15:27 on the following Tuesday. It is governed by the BBC's Charity Appeal Policy.[3]
Each year there is a special Christmas Appeal in association with St Martin-in-the-Fields church near Trafalgar Square, London. This raises funds which are divided equally between The Connection at St Martin's, which supports vulnerable and homeless people in central London, and The Vicar's Relief Fund, which makes grants, averaging £160, to "those who are in need or suffering hardship" anywhere in the UK.[4]
In 2007-2008 the appeals raised £1,433,154.02 for 52 charities. Just over half of this, £725,000, was for the annual Christmas appeal, broadcast on 2 Dec 2007. Amounts raised for other charities in that year ranged from £1,366.00 (Jenni Murray appealing for BEAT (Eating Disorders Association) on 24 Feb 2008) to £53,988.00 (Krishnan Guru-Murthy appealing for Homeless International on 3 March 2007, one week later).[5]
An earlier programme based on the same principle was The Week's Good Cause, which ran from 1926 (originally on the BBC Home Service) until controller James Boyle's major reforms to Radio 4 in 1998.[6]