Emergency broadcasting, radio's market share, and the launch of Alfred
Greetings from a rather soggy Brisbane. It’s been raining non-stop for quite some time, and there is widespread flooding throughout Australia’s third-largest city. Above, the aftermath of a local road’s closure. And, of course, I had the radio on.
The ABC is well-used to emergency broadcasting, and the playbook for them is very much based on quiet, calm, unsensationalised information. A number of local stations simulcast the same output, which, at the time I tuned in, was being ably and calmly hosted by Cathie Schnitzerling (who, as far as I can see, is Executive Producer of an ABC TV news program, Landline, and does swing work at ABC Radio Brisbane), and produced by Kat Davidson. It was most certainly the place to get information: many public officials giving info about their areas and responsibilities.
4BC was an afterthought to me, mainly because when I moved here, 4BC was just a rebroadcast of a Sydney radio station, and I still think of it as such (even though it’s now local from 5.30am-7pm, excepting mid-mornings). When I tuned in on Saturday afternoon, expecting some sportsball program, it was a live and well-balanced local show with plenty of public officials, yes, but also many ordinary people on the ground. Jingles announced “a special broadcast” showing a bit of forethought, and when I tuned-in, Jason Dasey was on-air, produced by Olivia Wilbury. 4BC’s output benefited from being more focused on Brisbane, rather than having to cover adjoining broadcast areas: on 4BC, officials were on-air, but so, too, was more colour from local people, and a little less focus on towns six hours’ drive away. My initial reaction to overlook the station was a reminder that if you change a station, you need to focus on the marketing for a lot longer than you think.
The ABC was a good calming listen, if quite strange to me having never heard that information-heavy format before. I can absolutely see a place for information radio like this. For me, though, I think 4BC was a warmer, more human listen: better for connection, rather than just information. It was also delightful to hear that Frank Walker from National Tiles is still alive and well.
On the TV, while the ABC is statewide, the commercial channels aren’t, to their benefit in this instance. I tuned in to Nine News around midday to see Alison Ariotti and Jonathan Uptin, crossing to a number of live feeds from across the area, including Garry Youngberry, the weather broadcaster. Cameras were soaking (and repeatedly being wiped-down on-screen); some reporters were stuck trying to travel to stories. It was an excellent service (and disappointing that the EPG told potential viewers that it was women’s football).
I feel for ABC Radio Brisbane, though. The studios are next to the river, and our emergency broadcaster was evacuated last night. I gather that the station is now being panelled elsewhere, with presenters and producers doing their jobs from home. After the last two years, though, at least they’ve had plenty of practice at WFH. I wish them luck.
Want a long-term graph showing US radio ad revenue market share since 1930? Benedict Evans posts one. Fascinating to see how consistently radio has taken the same market share.
Congratulations to Keri Jones on the launch of Alfred, a 24-hour speech radio station for a market of under 12,000 people.
I’m in the London Daily Telegraph, talking about radio and how it isn’t, yet, dead. Nice piece!
Podcasts seem to do twice as well for 13-24s as talk radio, says Edison Research.
Radioplayer is looking for a Technical Solutions Manager in London.
There’s an episode of Twenty Thousand Hertz all about UK pirate radio this week, if that floats your boat <- pun intended
Not sure this is a “should be proud” thing but there it is anyway: “how many radio stations can you fit onto a DAB multiplex”.
Talk radio is becoming an old person’s thing (even more so than radio overall). Steven Goldstein grabs the numbers.
Thanks to RadioWorld for watching my keynote for the EBU. Nice writeup!
I’ve never understood people deliberately making content for a third-party platform like Facebook or Instagram. This Twitter thread is quite the explanation as to why it’s a bad thing - it’s great, until it isn’t.
Online radio figures for the Netherlands, all in one place. Wouldn’t it be fun to see the equivalent for the UK or Australia?
- Impressive streaming figure increases for Australia’s 4BC, 3AW, 2GB. 9.2m hours, and 9.3m streams (so average per stream is one hour duration)
Infinite Dial 2022 for South Africa. Fast changes in this market: podcast reach has doubled in two years.
Radio is now bigger than (linear) TV for 18-34s, says data from the US. I suspect this is a definition thing: but it certainly points to the misplaced primacy of live. And still, we hear radio people excited to point out their stations are “live”.
Irish podcasters The 2 Johnnies, who became Spotify exclusives in June, began hosting the national RTÉ 2FM afternoon drive show on Monday. On Wednesday, they published a “crude and vulgar” video on social media and were promptly suspended from the show after just three days on-air. Whoops.
Want to supercharge your radio show? Here’s a £1 week-long trial of Show Prep - from a world class radio consultant and the best show-prep writer in the UK. Great for UK stations, or for English-language stations everywhere, too. (ad)
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Oh, and I’m delighted to be speaking again: I’ll be at Podcast Movement Evolutions in Los Angeles in March, and also speaking at Radio-Canada’s Ohdio conference in March too. I’ll also be at Radiodays Europe in Malmö, Sweden in May, The Podcast Show in London in May, and Canadian Music Week in June. I’m very much looking forward to getting back on the road.