This is a list of events in British radio during 1999.
Events
BBC Radio Wales begins to appear on FM in the major conurbations for the first time. Previously, apart from in
Gwent, the station had only been available on MW with the allocated block of FM frequencies for local broadcasting in Wales, which was only available in parts of the country, used by
BBC Radio Cymru as BBC management had concluded that BBC Radio Cymru would not have enough listeners to merit nationwide coverage on a medium wave frequency.
22 January – Church leaders condemn Birmingham-based station
BRMB's "
Two Strangers and a Wedding" competition in which contestants enter a competition to marry a complete stranger.[2] The winners, Greg Cordell and Carla Germaine are married at a Registry Office in the city, but the couple separates three months later.[3] Germaine later meets and marries BRMB disc jockey
Jeremy Kyle.[4]
London's dance/urban station
Kiss 100 is rebranded by
EMAP Radio with a new logo. The station introduces a more mainstream pop-orientated playlist which leads to criticism from some DJs and listeners.
26 April – Radio 2 presenter
Johnnie Walker is suspended from his drivetime show after allegations concerning a drug problem appeared in the Sunday tabloid, the News of the World. Walker has been the victim of a
tabloidexposé over his
cocaine problem.[6]Richard Allinson presents the drivetime show during Walker's absence, while
Tom Robinson stands in on his Saturday afternoon show.
April –
Radio Regen is launched in Manchester to provide training in
community radio. It broadcasts a two-month-long temporary radio station called City Centre Life 87.7.
May
14 May – The final Lunchtime Concerto, which had aired on weekdays at 2pm since the station’s launch, is broadcast on
Classic FM, ahead of a schedule refresh which includes the launch the next day of a new nightly magazine slot Tonight at Eleven.
24 May –
Radio 2 says that presenter
Sarah Kennedy is taking a week's holiday because of stress following a bizarre performance while standing in for
Terry Wogan the previous Friday. This had included calling
Ken Bruce an "old fool" and referring to the presenter of the day's Pause For Thought slot as "an old prune". The episode attracted a number of concerned calls to the BBC, while Kennedy blames the incident on a lack of sleep the previous night and apologises to listeners. She had been due to stand in for Wogan the following week, but takes time off instead.[7]
2 August – It is announced that
ITV has signed
BBC sports presenter
Des Lynam on a four-year contract to become the company's main football presenter.[12] Consequently, he will no longer present his Friday drivetime show on
Radio 2.
19 August –
BBC Radio 1 broadcasts its first split programming when it introduces weekly national new music shows for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. New presenters include
Huw Stephens and
Bethan Elfyn.[13]
September
11 September –
BBC Radio 3's breakfast programme On Air is renamed Morning on 3.[14]
Thirteen years after
Radio Victory had stopped broadcasting,
Victory FM starts broadcasting to the
Portsmouth area on a permanent basis, after six 28-day RSL FM broadcasts which took place between 1994 and 1998. Within weeks, the station is acquired by
TLRC.
October
14 October – Managers at
BBC Radio 2 reinstate
Johnnie Walker after he is fined £2,000 by magistrates for admitting possession of cocaine; he will return to the airwaves on 6 December.[17]
November
15 November – Britain's first national commercial
DAB digital radio multiplex,
Digital One, goes on air to England, and parts of Scotland and Wales – D1 does not become available in
Northern Ireland until 2013. The stations carried on D1 at launch include the three national commercial AM/FM services –
Classic FM,
Virgin Radio (later Absolute) and
Talk Radio UK (later talkSPORT) – along with two new digital-first stations – fresh pop service
Core and classic rock station
Planet Rock, both at this time under the ownership of Classic FM's then parent (and Digital One shareholder)
GWR Group.
17 December – Britain's first million
pounds prize is given away, on a segment of
Chris Evans's
Virgin breakfast show called Someone's Going to be a Millionaire (a reference to ITV's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, which at the time has not had a million pound winner).
Unknown
BBC Radio 1 establishes its Live Lounge as part of the mid-morning show.
Bedford station
B97 is rebranded back to its original name of Chiltern FM.