Knowledge (XXG)

Talk:BBC Radio 1

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1607:
live events and from lifts in a Gabba-loving friend's car, and I realise this is subjective, Gabba is a sub-genre of Techno, devised for people who are excited by large values of bpm. It's like people who buy processors based on GHz alone. More is not necessarily better ;-) Happy Hardcore peaked in 1992. Scouse isn't really a proper genre in itself, more just a subset of House that WAS more popular in Liverpool than anywhere else... In London, the only times I've heard it mentioned is when I'm talking to people who have lived in Liverpool! Perhaps I don't like House well enough to tell the difference, maybe it's my taste. Which brings us back to the original point... there are millions of Radio 1 listeners across the whole world. Even if they just look at the UK listeners, I think you'll be hard-pressed to find enough people who would actually listen to a Gabba set to make it worthwhile. I've definitely heard some Altern-8 in the last few months at about 2am (so that's Happy Hardcore covered). And let's face it: If you're into a genre enough to feel passionately about it's lack of airplay, you're probably deep enough into it that there's nothing new they can show you! I wouldn't expect the licence-payer to fulfill my need for late-60s proto-electronica Kosmische by playing some Organisation or Tangerine Dream... If anyone asks me about the origins of modern electronic music, they can come to my house and listen to the vinyl. If they want to know about the origins of pre-war electronic music, I'll power up my theremin and bore them to death on how it relates to analogue synths they would have heard in 1980s techno. I love the music but I realise it is purely history to most.
1686:
Acker Bilk than Charlie Parker, more recipes than Ronettes – Divide, dumb-down, and rule (Britannia). So Rock music in Britain became less the hands-on innovation of the Kinks and more the slightly sickly, overblown, dressed up, camp of Queen. The strength of John Lennon was replaced by the yobbishness of Slade and the youth of Britain followed suite on the streets. Under station master Derek Chinnery there was talk of ex RAF types stalking the corridors of the Radio 1 section of Broadcasting House marshalling the ex-pirate D.J.’s (given jobs by the Beeb to bring the fans over from the ships) to toe the line. Anything political or what they termed ‘morbid’ wasn’t played.
1602:
his late slot was very telling. No one can say that they have continued the policy of Peels to play anything. Radio 1 has lost its way. It has put too much focus on Dance music. Look at the weekend shows . Also the station has stifled and obstructed musical innovation and development in the UK by avoiding certain music genres. An example is the continued employment of Pete Tong. His programming choices have destroyed innovation and development in electronic dance music by playing trance and progressive house for the last 10 years. There has to be a big sea change in Radio 1 if it wants to remain relevant to its listeners.
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30’s (Jazz, Gordon Lightfoot etc.) played on Radio 2, and music that appealed to the under 30’s (Glitter bands, Bowie,) played on 1. The Hippies were being strangled with their own head bands – the only ‘classic’ that was played with any regularity on Radio 1 was Jeff Beck’s “Hi Ho Silver Lining” with it’s reactionary and sarcastic “You’re everywhere and nowhere baby…..(in your hippie hat)” We beatniks/hippies were basically being told to forget dreams of revolution, get out of bed and get to work. Get married, have kids and knuckle-under for Thatcher’s sake! We were being shown the evil of our ways.
1678:
work , stay in bed and listen to the latest from Donovan – Sunshine Superman…..” without pirate radio left-of–field classics like Unit Four Plus Two “Concrete & Clay” would never have come to light.But the idea that a major section of the media could tread anything but the party line rankled the establishment and in late August 1967 “radical”, “left wing” M.P. Tony Benn in his position of Postmaster General banned pirate radio and gave responsibility for purveying rock music back to the BBC.
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Young show,and still to this day gets played about 3 times per week. Talk about ‘mind-control to Major Tom’.Were there any casualties? - the rockdreams of 10 million listeners; and folk rock singer Nick Drake who committed suicide after pestering his producer to know why his works of art weren’t making it, to be told they didn’t fit the optimistic bland-out of the monopolistic Beeb.
900: 1199: 253: 1181: 191: 1458:' In July of 2005, Sirius Satellite Radio began simulcasting Radio 1 across the United States on channel 11, and Sirius Canada began simulcasting Radio 1 when they launched on December 1, 2005 (also on channel 11). The simulcast is timeshifted five hours to allow US and Canadian listeners in the Eastern Time Zone to hear Radio 1 at the same time of day as UK listeners.' 1450: 1255: 1611:
it will not be enjoyed by many: whilst music-lovers such as me and presumably you would press on to the end and enjoy it for its uniqueness, most would turn over or turn off. So, it has no place on prime-time Radio 1. I'm sure it's only a matter of time before their web presence includes a library of eclectica, so we'll all be happy then!!! :-)
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before Kiss FM was even begun. They often have themed nights where they will play the more eclectic music, I have been introduced to various electronica through Radio 1. And with regards to the gay music: I was taping Bronski Beat songs off the radio in the early-mid 80s, I don't think you can have more of a gay anthem than Small Town Boy!
1578:
angle-grinder-woman. Radio 1 play a lot of "proper" music, i.e. not bubblegum pop/teeny bop. They can't cater for everything, but I bet if you were to listen 24/7 for a month you would hear some Gabba, Happy Hardcore or Scouse. Probably at 4 am, but that's always been the penalty for liking a minority genre.
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mid Eighties. Another sub Genre was Hi Energy. This sub Culture associated with the Gay nightclub scene in the late 1970's / early 1980's was blacklisted from Radio 1 play lists. And Finally up to date , the station has still refused to come to terms with Gabba , Happy Hardcore and Scouse dance genres.
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Heavy 1960’s airplay given to Engelbert’s misogynistic Release Me was replaced by 1980’s repeat playing of The Eagles’ pro settling-down Desperado. The Chi-Lites soul classic on teenage alienation: The Coldest Days of My Life was played once by Tony Blackburn on Radio 1 back in 1970 and never again,
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So in August (?) 1967 Radio 1 was ushered in to the ringing tones of The Move’s “Flowers In The Rain”. Nothing had changed – or had it? Rock music which had galvanised a generation together was being murdered. In Britain the BBC decided to divide and rule so you got music that appealed to the over
1610:
So to summarise, breaking cutting-edge music to the masses is a wonderful mission. However, music that is now retro (that includes Gabba and Happy Hardcore) cannot be "broken" to the masses, and is unlikely to be nostalgic to those who didn't enjoy it when it was en vogue. As it is an acquired taste,
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A small point, but you're misrepresenting Wedgewood-Benn. For a start, despite being well on the left wing of the party, he in fact prevaricated against outlawing the offshore stations. In the end Wilson promoted him out of the job and gave the position to Edward Short, who lost no time in pushing
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In the fashion of playing soothing music to milking cows Radio 1 & Radio 2 do their bit to keep the birth rate up by pumping out a constant diet of love/sex songs be they rock, pop, acid, or rap; an example would be Marvin Gaye & Tammi Tyrell’s “It Takes Two” which seemed to open every Jimmy
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The government clampdown I’m thinking of goes back further than that to 1967 – the magic year of rock’n’roll. The air was full of wonderous music courtesy of the pirate ship radio stations Radio Carolyn and Radio London. D.J.’s would say things like: “It’s a bitter-cold morning out, why not forget
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The is hardcore music on radio1 atm unfortunately it is only on the second week every month but it is on their its on Kutskis In New DJs We Trust show. I think radio one and in particular Pete Tong does a lot for all kinds Dance of music on radio1. He is the one who decides the In New DJs We Trust
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Just thought i would add that the new controller for Radio 1 is pushing "pop" music over alternative, rock, and dance genres in its playlists. So again Radio 1 is out of sync with the audience they are supposed to serve. And why did they not put Basshunter on its playlist, even when it got to number
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Is there any reason to use a constant width of 200px for the logo instead of using individual users' preferences for thumbnails? I use Knowledge (XXG) on my PC and on a mobile/PDA. On my PC, both settings look pretty similar. However, on my PDA the logo is way too big at 200px, but looks great if
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Mud , Status Quo, and the odd Captain Beefheart track played once a week on the John Peel show might not have been so bad but it was watered down with endless trivial chatter from the D.J.’s and Beatles tunes played by the Northern Dance Orchestra – you’d think the Queen had died! Radio 2 was more
1601:
I disagree with the comments of the second paragraph. The mandate of Radio 1 is to play new innovative music. Its demographic is 13 to 27 year old listeners. They are expecting cutting edge and what they get is Chris Moyles. Also when John Peel passed away the decision to change the muisc policy on
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I think the claim that Annie was Britain's first female DJ needs some clarification. English transmissions from Radio Luxembourg had occasional female DJs, and a couple of the smaller fort based 60s stations had female presenters. Annie was probably the first who could be clearly heard throughout
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However, Radio 1, as it's name would suggest, is intended to reach a wide audience. I'm not sure that many people would be keen on Ultraviolence or Aphex Twin in the middle of their drive to work. Remember that Radio 1 was the first legal station in this country to play Jungle and Drum'n'Bass, way
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Unfortunately Radio 1 has had a history of musical censorship during its history. During the tenure of Matthew Banister the station refused to play British Hip Hop after the political connotations of the Rodney King beatings. In fact it took years for Radio 1 to recognise Hip Hop especially in the
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The Beatles split up and the thrill had gone. Led Zeppelin could have taken up the rock cudgels from them but their 1969 rock anthem Whole Lotta Love was only played the once on Alan Freeman’s Pick Of The Pops, I remember switching on and catching the last ten seconds of it. Dylan, heeding the
1606:
Unfortunately I still can't remember my password, but I am the poster of the second paragraph... I maintain what I said before, but I would like to comment on the third paragraph... the fact is, Gabba, Happy Hardcore and Scouse Dance are neither cutting edge nor innovative. From what I've seen at
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What a strange article! There were various changes to Radio 1 in the 1980s and it had a very large audience - features like "Our Tune" (beginning in 1980) and The Steve Wright In The Afternoon show of the mid-to-late '80s are still widely remembered, but the 1980s are not featured at all - the
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There seems to be a major gap in this page; it jumps almost straight from the opening year or so to the mid-1990s, with almost nothing on some of the developments in between such as "Sounds of the Seventies" or the live folk half-hour (which featured live sessions from acts such as Fairport
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Just because a radio station isn't playing much of what is actually a very niche genre of music doesn't mean they are censoring music. For instance, a year or two back I saw Ultraviolence in London and there were no more than 200 people in the whole gig, including Johnny himself and the
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The current behaviour displayed by editors here could be said to be edit warring. Myself, I think that unfortunatly, one of us is being disruptive, and they are about to be warned. We have repeatedly referred to the policy concerned in edsums, so beware.
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BBC Radio 1 is now carried by Sirius, I see no mention of this in the article. I also see no mention of the fact that it is not a live mirrored stream of Radio 1 (what sirius broadcasts and what BBC Radio 1 webcasts are different).
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Yes, I have a subscription to British Newspaper Archive and am happy to start an article on him. I found a couple of online articles covering his death earlier this year. Perhaps I'll be able to find more with a bit of digging.
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I came here to say the same. It seems to me that a current schedule is not encyclopedic, and we are not the Radio Times. Why a current schedule and not, say, the schedule from the week of launch? I'm going to remove it.
2224:"Radio 1 originally broadcast on 1214 kHz medium wave (or 247 metres). On 23 November 1978, the latter was moved to 1053/1089 kHz (275/285 m), but did not broadcast nationally on its own FM frequencies until late 1987" 153: 1800:
The Radio 1 Schedule will change every month from until the end of the year. There is a major change from September and minor changes every month after until January. I will keep the shedule up to date.
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Would it be better to represent the schedule as a table? I could probably make a table for it but it would take a while so if anyone thinks it's a really stupid idea tell me here and I won't bother.
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I've checked through Google, the law applies to BBC TV and Radio Schedules, ITV and Channel 4 schedules. Schedules, regardless of how written is copyrighted of the aforementioned company, violating
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Ironically, the editor that is waging the edit was has just slapped me with an edit warring warning notice!! I am now going to have to take a step back until someone else sorts this nonsense out.
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So what sort of material do they have on this radio station? Pop music? Golden oldies? Talkback? Sports? This entry is useless for somebody who hasn't already been exposed to the station.
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True that Radio 1 has made a few daft censorship decisions in the past. I can't remember any offhand, but there have been one or two that have made me scratch my head and think "Why?!"
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because BBC Radio 1 is the podcast provider and at the time I thought it was the only relevant article that it could be merged with, but now I'm seeing that there are articles for
2049:
The format of these changed before 2003: I can remember the Dance Day being cancelled in Manchester. If someone could do some research and correct it that would be cool.
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needs some more info about bobby and nihal's show on R1 - at the moment they are only mentioned and have no page of their own and the nihal link goes to the wrong page.
1163: 987: 2993:, Man Ezeke was the first black daytime DJ on Radio 1, which sounds to me to be an important thing to include. However I'm struggling to find a better source for this. 2521: 2517: 2503: 2383: 2379: 2365: 729: 1217: 815: 147: 3225: 3210: 1847:
Yep, I will do some more reading to clarify, but as it stands to my knowledge, that schedule will have to go ASAP. Regardless, current schedules are a violation of
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Hmm... the (now Red Bee) Broadcasting Dataservices page has changed since that discussion that AxG brought up to now say TV listings. Again, I will check the
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Fearne Cotton will become the first regular female presenter of the UK Top 40. Jo Whiley was the first female presenter of the UK Top 40 on November 24, 2002
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Ironically, it was Wilson who lowered the voting age to 18, then he shut down the offshore stations and Labour lost the next election. Dumb, dumb, dumb. :D
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rulers warning of a (broken neck?) motorbike accident, and not wishing to go the way of John Lennon 20, and Lady Di 30 years later, went into retirement.
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DJs and not forgetting the essential mix which has probably played nearly every type of electronica music including mid nineties cheesy happy hardcore. --
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I have edited this section as it previously implied that the show had always been 4-7, whereas it used to be different during the Dave Pearce days.
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If you think that is ridiculous during the first Gulf War in !991 they refused to play "Massive Attack" because of their programming rules. Daft.
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Radio 1 runs 'One Big Weekend' every year, a free 2 day concert. Radio 1 also sponsors a stage at the reading and leeds festivals each year
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That would be fantastic if you could do that. Can you also add him to the radio 1 article? I don't have a subscription to the archive.
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Anyone know about where the transmitters are etc for Radio 1? This could easily be it's own sub-article if someone knows anything...--
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2234: 2172:. So it's probably not the best idea. Also, the changes don't take place until September so I undid your edit, nothing personal :) - 2253:
Whatever monster Savile became. Should Knowledge (XXG) airbrush him out of history, as has happened in this article. I think not.
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I was thinking the same. Schedules have been removed from other Knowledge (XXG) radio pages so I think it's best if they're gone.--
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and linked it into the main article. I can't stand Newsbeat do maybe someone else would be better at expanding this section. --
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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These two statements appear to contradict each other. If JW was the first how can FC also be the first? Unless it means:
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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I am surprised there is no mention of Theme One in the section of the start of programme on the first day of Radio 1. --
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whereas their Homely Girl and Have You Seen Her became the stations background melodies of the seventies and eighties.
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This artical is good but its its abit wordy and their are no tables to display infomation which helps to digest info
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The Schedule seems to have returned as History/Today. Could it be removed again? Oh, and the programming section.
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to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the
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Maybe you should right a section on how bad the quality of the music is that is being played nowadays
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There is no "latter". Was there some info about sharing FM which was moved, leaving this dangling?
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for details of the transmitters, and then use the National Grid References (NGR) and site names at
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Chris Moyles weekly roundup is #1 UK podcast... Radio 1 diversifying by suppling podcasts and such
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Just wondering if it's worth mentioning this in the drama section. It was sort of a parody of the
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before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template
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before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template
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Regardless of NOTRADIOGUIDE, that edit is a mess which I shall revert directly. It looks like
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without understanding what they were doing. They are not a newbie, and should know better. --
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https://web.archive.org/web/20131111133603/http://frequencyfinder.org.uk/r1_sched_98_04.html
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has absolutely no independent coverage from reliable secondary sources and does not meet
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Was Terry Wogan really on a pirate ship as the text suggests. Doubts about others, too.
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The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion:
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article flips from an unsubstantiated "70s Peak" to "Changes in the 90s". Highly odd!
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If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
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If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
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rule in mind, should this article contain lists of programmes and broadcast slots,
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The Radio 1 logo used on wikipedia is out of date... it has changed slightly. see
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National Association of Radio Distress-Signalling and Infocommunications (Hungary)
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Awesome. Can we use this source even though you have to register to view it?
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https://web.archive.org/web/20140516153430/http://www.siriusxm.com/bbcradio1
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https://web.archive.org/web/20131210042804/http://ons.gov.uk/ons/index.html
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Where to find BBC Radio 1 archives of deleted transmissions? For example
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Hello, you have forgot the bog weekend 2019, can you please add it -
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respectively for exact locations, etc. Hope this is of help to you. -
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So why is there a big banner suggesting it should be on Radio 1 page?
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The consensus is against lists of programmes and broadcast slots per
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The photo was ammended on this article yesterday, and so is correct.
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set as a thumbnail because I have set thumbnail display to 120px in
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on page 7 of 9 December 1992's Reading Evening Post confirms this.
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An article on a broadcaster should not list current schedules, etc
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Is this information really enyclopedic? Seems a bit too much like
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Censorship with a small 'c' from the beginning, a fans eye view:
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A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion
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_______________________________ _______________________________
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http://www.culturenorthernireland.org/article.aspx?art_id=1253
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I'm very glad I checked now - Thanks for the quick response.
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to make sure. My comment on policy violation still stands. --
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/reception/transmitters/radio/index.shtml
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Add free-use images to biographical articles where possible
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Knowledge (XXG) articles are not electronic program guides
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for additional information. I made the following changes:
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for additional information. I made the following changes:
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Check out their website and find out www.bbc.co.uk/radio1
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Editors 174: 1226:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Spoken Knowledge (XXG) 2326:http://frequencyfinder.org.uk/r1_sched_98_04.html 2306:http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/info/frequencies.shtml 2854:Merge proposal has been withdrawn by proposer. — 1039:, a project which is currently considered to be 33:for general discussion of the article's subject. 2645: 2802:Participate in the deletion discussion at the 2502:This message was posted before February 2018. 2364:This message was posted before February 2018. 2164:As shown above, a schedule table goes against 1827:Unfortunate adding UK radio and TV schedules 8: 1376:, or just simply useless information to me. 2135:Schedule changes - would a table be better? 1478:any bobby and nihal fans want to help out? 1229:Template:WikiProject Spoken Knowledge (XXG) 2444:I have just modified one external link on 2228: 2221:The first two sentences don't make sense: 1929:Convention, Pentangle and Shirley Collins. 1175: 1138:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject United Kingdom 1070: 999: 962:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Radio Stations 894: 713:Here are some tasks awaiting attention: 691: 573: 399:(in light of forthcoming 30th anniversary) 370:Here are some tasks awaiting attention: 321: 216: 2996:If anyone can help, you know what to do. 2747:inclusion of lists. The relevant policy, 2288:I have just modified 4 external links on 2009:present it ie as a headline presenter.... 2001:while JW did present the show she did so 2217:Confusing text in "Analogue Frequencies" 1674:THE MUSIC THEY PLAY CAN INFLUENCE YOU 1177: 1072: 1001: 896: 575: 218: 188: 3226:Mid-importance United Kingdom articles 3211:High-importance Radio station articles 2756: 2752: 2688:such as the addition made in this edit 2145:http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/27718063 2353:to let others know (documentation at 2168:and without paying royalties is also 682:This page is within the scope of the 264:This article is within the scope of 7: 2877:The following discussion is closed. 2668:The following discussion is closed. 2466:http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/index.html 1204:This article is within the scope of 1118:This article is within the scope of 1035:This article is within the scope of 942:This article is within the scope of 627:This article is within the scope of 3231:WikiProject United Kingdom articles 3216:WikiProject Radio Stations articles 1141:Template:WikiProject United Kingdom 965:Template:WikiProject Radio Stations 726:Missing years and articles in radio 413:- references and general clean-up, 207:It is of interest to the following 23:for discussing improvements to the 1943:No mention of Mike Read either. -- 1634:one in the Gallup charts? Nutty. 1207:WikiProject Spoken Knowledge (XXG) 551:following improvements to article. 14: 3236:Externally peer reviewed articles 2777:The discussion above is closed. 2448:. Please take a moment to review 2316:http://www.siriusxm.com/bbcradio1 2292:. Please take a moment to review 1701:Alan Griffey 23rd February 2008 747:Unknown-importance Radio articles 686:. New members are always welcome! 647:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Radio 50:New to Knowledge (XXG)? Welcome! 3109:Fantastic. It looks good to me. 2953:The discussion above is closed. 2003:only occasionally and as a guest 1448: 1344:Explicit image size vs thumbnail 1253: 1197: 1179: 1105: 1095: 1074: 1051:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject Rave 1028: 1003: 929: 919: 898: 760:Radio articles needing attention 704: 614: 604: 577: 361: 251: 241: 220: 189: 45:Click here to start a new topic. 3221:C-Class United Kingdom articles 2661:) 00:52, 21 October 2018 (UTC) 2304:Corrected formatting/usage for 2108:Whatever happened to the 1980s? 1829:without paying a royality is a 1232:Spoken Knowledge (XXG) articles 1158:This article has been rated as 982:This article has been rated as 667:This article has been rated as 308:This article has been rated as 288:Knowledge (XXG):WikiProject BBC 3206:C-Class Radio station articles 3191:High-importance Radio articles 3141:bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000hhr6 3135:Archives/Deleted transmissions 2769:08:59, 18 September 2018 (UTC) 2597:Please note that in line with 2139:They're changing the schedule 1939:09:45, 15 September 2008 (UTC) 1791:16:45, 30 September 2007 (UTC) 1531:22:46, 30 September 2007 (UTC) 1496:) 18:02, April 12, 2006 (UTC) 854:The History of Rock & Roll 835:Requests for Radio peer review 509:BBC articles without infoboxes 1: 2738:22:43, 7 September 2018 (UTC) 2700:20:11, 7 September 2018 (UTC) 2690:, or should they be removed? 2129:17:51, 26 February 2013 (UTC) 2021:17:31, 20 December 2008 (UTC) 1721:21:29, 23 February 2008 (UTC) 1627:01:19, 13 November 2007 (UTC) 1540:I've added a short bit about 1424:01:38, 14 November 2011 (UTC) 1381:00:30, 30 November 2005 (UTC) 1260:This article was reviewed by 1220:and see a list of open tasks. 1132:and see a list of open tasks. 956:and see a list of open tasks. 641:and see a list of open tasks. 396:BBC Computer Literacy Project 42:Put new text under old text. 2968:filmm released the same year 2632:18:06, 29 January 2018 (UTC) 2615:18:01, 29 January 2018 (UTC) 2593:17:58, 29 January 2018 (UTC) 2432:08:00, 23 October 2016 (UTC) 1983:12:16, 2 November 2008 (UTC) 1650:20:45, 25 January 2008 (UTC) 1524:http://tx.mb21.co.uk/gallery 1466:10:11, 13 January 2006 (UTC) 1454:10:07, 13 January 2006 (UTC) 1363:18:49, 16 October 2005 (UTC) 455:BBC World Service Television 421:- unreferenced and confusing 419:BBC World Service Television 3176:Top-importance BBC articles 3143:on 24 April 2020 hosted by 3088:I've started an article at 2918:That's What He Said Podcast 2888:That's What He Said Podcast 2833:) 10:26, 1 June 2019 (BST) 2059:19:19, 5 January 2009 (UTC) 2040:19:19, 5 January 2009 (UTC) 1912:18:19, 22 August 2008 (UTC) 1889:18:04, 22 August 2008 (UTC) 1866:17:55, 22 August 2008 (UTC) 1849:What Knowledge (XXG) is not 1843:13:42, 22 August 2008 (UTC) 1821:13:34, 22 August 2008 (UTC) 1776:12:32, 10 August 2007 (UTC) 1312:16:30, 1 October 2007 (UTC) 3257: 3201:WikiProject Radio articles 3157:16:43, 20 April 2023 (UTC) 2980:16:54, 25 April 2022 (UTC) 2946:19:50, 28 March 2021 (UTC) 2904:01:24, 17 March 2021 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