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James Cridland's blog

Where radio and new platforms collide. With beer.

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My show! What happened to my show!

Posted on Thursday, June 14th, 2007 at 1:19pm. #


An article I wrote while being The Pulse’s evening presenter

Once upon a time, in a distant world, I was a radio presenter, broadcasting on a station called The Pulse in Bradford.

I had a great time. For a year I presented the drive time show, and then, when they sacked a certain Chris Moyles, I went and did his show instead (more info in his book, if you’re interested). I interviewed people, opened fetes, wrote articles on the internet, and it cemented my interest in radio, giving me some really useful experience.

I notice that people don’t get the same chance I did any more. Tucked away in this article is the news that my little station no longer appears to have its own evening show, taking a networked show till 1am.

I do understand the benefit of networking to small radio stations; and am very aware of the financial restraints that some of these stations are under. It’s no doubt that networking a ‘better’ show is the right thing to do.

However, it would appear that there are less and less jobs in the industry. I probably wouldn’t be still involved in radio were it not for those two years being a radio presenter. The information I learnt was tremendous, and the experience of being on-air (an experience I had until the middle of 2000) was a great thing: and still stands me in good stead today.

It’s a real shame - albeit an economic inevitability - that “my show” no longer exists any more; and that more and more young people are missing out on the first rung of their radio career.

3 comments

dan slipper said at June 14th, 2007 at 1:43pm

The experience of working on live radio is invaluable and forces one to constantly keep the audience in mind. Lots of media people should do it!

Hope all is well with you and congratulations on the new job!

Thomas said at June 15th, 2007 at 12:53am

I was shocked on the weekend while reading Chris Moyles’ autobiography to find that you get a few mentions

steve martin said at June 17th, 2007 at 7:12pm

I agree with you to a point but the fact is that the industry is so much bigger now and other opportunities for young talent have opened up. Student radio, in-store and community radio are some that spring to mind and those stations often allow young broadcasters to find their voice much more easily than might a tightly formatted AC station.

Now, what we really want to see is your publicity photograph from The Pulse.

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