After having his car stolen the previous evening,
Graham Norton asks listeners of his
Radio 2 show to help find it. Calling it "The Great Car Hunt" he tells listeners to "Keep your eyes out for it. It was filthy by the way." The car is subsequently returned to him.[3][4]
12 January –
GMG Radio confirms a deal with US syndication firm
Premiere Networks to air 1970s editions of the original American Top 40 show presented by
Casey Kasem at weekends on its new digital station "
Smooth 70s". The station also features Disco Lunch and Late Night Love Songs among its weekday programming.[6]
21 January – Under new guidelines to come into force from 30 April clinics which charge for pregnancy services including abortions will be able to advertise on radio and television after the
Broadcast Committee of Advertising Practice ruled there was no justification for barring such clinics from advertising their services.[7]
23 January – GMG Radio announces it is conducting a "full review" of its news staff. Currently the broadcaster employs 39 journalists, nine of whom are based in Scotland.[8]
28 January –
Zoë Ball announces she is stepping down from her Saturday breakfast show on
Radio 2 and that she has presented her final programme. She will continue to provide cover for other presenters on the network.[11]
29 January –
Radio 4's Desert Island Discs celebrates its 70th anniversary, having first been broadcast on 29 January 1942.
Manx Radio, the
Isle of Man's national radio station sets out proposals to cut all but one of its staff presenters as the broadcaster faces cuts in contributions in the forthcoming
Government budget for 2012–13.[13]
7 February –
UTV Media unveils plans to merge
The Wolf, The Wyre and The Sever and rebrand them as
Signal 107.[14] The rebrand happens on 26 March.
14 February – Poole community radio station
The Bay 102.8 is re-branded as Hot Radio.[15]
16 February – Ofcom gives the
KMFMnetwork permission to network the breakfast show, meaning programming will be identical across all seven stations at all times.[16]
19 February –
Jazz FM issues an apology after listeners heard five minutes of what appeared to be an adult film played over the beginning of one of its programmes the previous evening.[17]Ofcom later launches an investigation into the incident after receiving three complaints.[18][19]
21 February –
Global Radio places an immediate ban on the playing of tracks by the boy band
One Direction on its stations after group member
Harry Styles mistakenly thanked Radio 1 during a
BRIT Awards acceptance speech for an award voted for by listeners of
Capital Radio, a Global station.[20]
25 February – Television presenter
Anneka Rice makes her debut on Radio 2, presenting the Saturday breakfast show vacated by Zoë Ball.[21]
26 February – The Top Ten countdown from The Radio 1 Chart Show is made available in vision for the first time through the station's website.[22]
28 February –
LBC introduces the first client-hosted programme with the weekday "Bupa Wellbeing Hour".[23]
1 March – Some digital radio listeners are required to retune their devices to continue receiving some stations after changes are made settings to "improve the efficiency of the network".[25]
5 March – Phil Upton says he will step down as host of the breakfast show on
BBC WM from the end of next month after five years in the role.[26]
6 March – Comedian
Alan Carr announces his intention to quit his Radio 2 show Going Out with Alan Carr so he can devote more time to his television career.[27]
7 March –
Guildford based
County Sound is given approval by
Ofcom to change its classic hits format to a community-based information station under the name Eagle Extra.[28]
14 March –
The owners of
Jack FM announce the launch of a new consultancy firm, OXIS Media, which will represent the brand throughout the UK and Europe.[29]
Ofcom invites bids from groups to apply for a community radio licence to broadcast in
Northern Ireland.[30]
16 March – Quidem, owners of the Touch FM brand agrees a deal with the
Lincs FM Group to buy
Oak FM in Loughborough and Hinckley, thus increasing its number of stations to eight.[31]
20 March – It is reported that
Norman Cook (aka Fatboy Slim) will join
Xfm for a ten part series titled On The Road To Big Beach Bootique 5 airing on Saturday nights from the end of March.[33]
21 March – Smooth Radio announces a deal to begin airing a syndicated show from the United States presented by
Donny Osmond from 8 April, replacing Graham Torrington's Late Night Love. Torrington will leave the network, while other changes include Drivetime'sCarlos and afternoon presenter
David Jensen swapping shows.[34]
8 April – Forces broadcaster
BFBS simulcasts a two-hour show with
Smooth Radio allowing family and friends of serving troops to connect with their loved ones.[44]
14 April – Radio 2 airs a minute-by-minute account of the
sinking of the RMS Titanic to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the disaster.[46]
16 April – Graham Torrington joins
BBC Radio WM to present a late night weekday music and chat programme.[47] He also rejoins
BBC Bristol from 21 April to host Graham Torrington's Late Night Love Songs, a show syndicated across BBC stations in the South West on Saturday and Sunday evenings.[48]
20 April –
Premier Christian Radio loses a
High Court challenge against a ban on an advert it planned to run seeking Christians who felt they had been "marginalised at work". The Court rules that it was "directed to a political end" and the Radio Advertising Clearance Centre acted lawfully in banning the commercial.[51]
23 April –
Jazz FM is found to be in breach of Ofcom's broadcasting code after the transmission of a pornographic soundtrack during an edition of one of its programmes. However, the station is not fined over the incident.[52]
The Independent reports that
BBC Radio 5 Live is to make broadcasting history by producing a two-hour show live from an abortion clinic. Presented by
Victoria Derbyshire, the show will air next month and the BBC hopes it will provide some insight into what is regarded by many as a taboo subject.[53]
April – The weekend breakfast show on the north of England
Magic stops being a local show in favour of a networked programme. Only the weekday breakfast show remains locally produced.
May
1 May – Ofcom approves a co-location request from
Touch Radio Staffordshire to move from
Tamworth to
Oak FM's headquarters in
Coalville. Touch will share some of Oak's programming, but must retain its local Staffordshire-based breakfast show.[56]
15 May – Newcastle-based
Amazing Radio leaves the DAB multiplex after a contractual dispute with Digital One owners Arqiva, but continues to broadcast online.[64]
22 May – Capital FM ends its three-month boycott on One Direction songs after the group's hit What Makes You Beautiful is played on the network shortly after 7.45pm.[65]
24 May –
Orion Media announces it will relaunch four medium wave frequencies in the
West Midlands under the
Free Radio brand. The stations – currently part of the
Gold network – will be dedicated to 80s music when the rebrand happens later in the year.[66]
27 May – Smooth Radio's Simon Bates presents a special programme ahead of the
Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant, previewing
Elizabeth II's journey along the
Thames on the
Spirit of Chartwell. Given special access to the vessel chosen as the
royal barge he chats to the boat's owner, Philip Morrell as well as composer
Debbie Wiseman who was commissioned to write the music for the event.[67]
31 May – BBC Radio 4 announces a five-and-a-half-hour celebration of
James Joyce's Ulysses on this coming
Bloomsday (16 June), claiming it as the novel's first full-length dramatisation in Britain.[68]
May –
BBC Somerset launches as a full-time station.
3 June – As part of their
Diamond Jubilee coverage Global Radio's
LBC 97.3 makes a world exclusive broadcast from
The Shard, Europe's tallest building, to cover the
River Thames Pageant, offering a bird's eye view of the event.[71]
7 June – Online music station
Last.fm says that some of its passwords have been leaked, and urges users of its website to change them immediately.[73]
8 June –
Bauer Radio stations
Kiss and
Heat carry the first in a series of live adverts for a new TV show on
Channel 4. The heat4…Live! social TV experiences are three live dual screen events, with the first centred around the Hollyoaks Savage Party special.[74]
It is reported that
Absolute Radio's CEO Donnach O'Driscoll has emailed users of the station's website to apologise after some received unsolicited mail.[75]
9 June –
Anita Anand takes over as presenter of Any Answers?.[70]
12 June – It is reported that
GMG has received multiple offers for its
radio business which value it at £50 million, as the company seeks to reshape itself to stem losses being made by The Guardian and The Observer.[77]
15 June – Supermarket retailer
Tesco buys a majority share in
WE7, the digital music platform which offers free personalised radio stations online.[78][79]
20 June – The
BBC Trust says that Radio 1's core audience is still too old, despite changes made to output following an amendment to the wording of its service licence in 2009. The station is aimed at the 15–29-year age group, but the average age of their listeners is 30.[81]
25 June –
GMG Radio is sold to
Global Radio for an undisclosed amount, thought to be around £50m. However, no structural changes will be made to either organisations until the deal has been investigated by Ofcom.[83] Several rival radio groups express their concerns over the takeover and the effect it could have on commercial radio in the UK.[84]
26 June – The online Radioplayer service is to be made available to non-Ofcom licensed stations for the first time, but initially only 30 slots are being offered.[85]
29 June –
Tim Lihoreau replaces
Mark Forrest as host of
Classic FM's weekday breakfast show with Jane Jones taking over the weekend breakfast show which Tim vacated and
John Brunning replaces Mark as printer of weekly Classic FM chart show.[86]
July
3 July –
The
BBC Trust rules that Sir
Terry Wogan breached the broadcasting guidelines following comments he made on his
Radio 2 show that appeared to make light of the
Costa Concordia disaster nine days after
the ship ran aground and partially sank off the Italian Coast in January.[87]
Global Radio announce plans to branch into television with the launch of two non-stop music channels;
Heart TV and
Capital TV, which will go on air from September.[88]
12 July – At midday, the
BBC World Service makes its final broadcast from London's
Bush House after 71 years at the building. The broadcaster's language services are thereafter relocated to
Broadcasting House in a merger with the rest of
BBC News.[92]
18 July – BBC Commissioning invites tenders to produce a new networked evening show for its local radio stations to begin airing from 7 January 2013.[93]
26 July –
Talksport secures a six-year deal to air
FA Cup matches, meaning the BBC has lost the exclusive rights to the competition and must now share with its commercial rival.[94]
27 July-12 August –
BBC Radio 5 Live operates a temporary station – 5 Live Olympics Extra – to provide additional coverage of the
2012 Summer Olympics.
18 August – It is announced that veteran Birmingham-based sports broadcaster
Tony Butler has retired due to ill health.[99][100]
24 August – An Ofcom survey of radio listeners reveals many believe there are too many adverts on commercial radio.[101]
27 August –
Astrologer
Russell Grant joins Smooth Radio to present a one-off programme playing some of his favourite tracks from the 1960s.[102]
The digital station Smooth 70s counts down its Top 70 of the 70s chart after inviting listeners to vote for their favourite hit from the decade. The chart, presented by several presenters from the main Smooth Radio station, features
ABBA's Dancing Queen as its number one.[103]
28 August –
UTV Media – which owns the
ITV franchise for Northern Ireland and the UK-based sports-orientated radio station
Talksport – reports a summer of mixed fortunes in terms of advertising revenue. Coverage of the
2012 European Cup proved lucrative for talkSPORT, but television advertising was hit by the
2012 Summer Olympics.[104]
30 August –
BBC Radio 2 unveils a landmark 50-part series which will highlight 50 tracks that have shaped modern British culture. The series, The People's Songs will be presented by
Stuart Maconie and air in 2013, and features songs as diverse as
Vera Lynn's "
We'll Meet Again" and "
Rehab" by
Amy Winehouse.[105]
In a marketing strategy designed to target its listeners with adverts suited to their age and location
Absolute Radio announces plans to require its listeners to register with their website to hear their online streaming services.[106]
West Midlands based
Sanjhi Awaz Radio ceases broadcasting after two years on air due to financial problems.[107]
It is announced that
BBC Radio 4 announcers
Charlotte Green and
Harriet Cass will take voluntary redundancy as the BBC cuts the announcing team for the station from twelve to ten.[110] At Radio 2
Fran Godfrey and Fenella Fudge will also leave, along with several freelance newsreaders who present bulletins for the network as the BBC streamlines its radio news teams.[111]
Mark Goodier announces he will leave Smooth Radio in mid-December to focus on his company, Wise Buddah Productions.[112]
7 September – BBC Radio 2 commissions an hour-long music drama pilot titled Shout to the Top starring
Shane Richie, that will combine specially written music and drama from the Radio Drama team.[113]
12 September – The radio industry news website Radio Today reports that Simon Bates has started to present a separate breakfast show for Smooth Radio's sister station,
Smooth 70s. The content is "
voice tracked" from the main breakfast show.[114]
14 September –
Chris Moyles hosts his final breakfast show on Radio 1.[115]
Sir Charles Allen, chairman of Global Radio criticises media regulation rules, saying those relating to the purchase of radio stations are out of date.[116]
17 September –
George Entwistle takes up his role of Director-General of the BBC.[117]
The syndicated BBC Local Radio evening show contract is awarded to Wire Free Productions, a new company set up by former BBC executives
Matthew Bannister and
Husain Husaini.[118]
24 September – Nick Grimshaw takes over the Radio 1 Breakfast Show.[115][119]
2 October – The switch-off of medium wave frequencies at some BBC local radio stations will continue after the trial attracted very few complaints from listeners, the BBC confirms.[121]
4 October – Former
Classic FM presenter Mark Forrest is confirmed as the presenter of the BBC's networked Local Radio Evening programme, which will begin from 7 January 2013.[122]
5 October –
Absolute Radio 00s rebrands itself Absolute Radio 007 for the day to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
James Bond film series and the launch of Sky Movies 007, a film channel dedicated to Bond movies.[123]
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the release of the first single from
The Beatles, all 39 BBC local radio stations stage their own My Beatles Story Day, airing listeners memories of the group.[124]
8 October – The BBC launches
iPlayer Radio as a separate service to
BBC iPlayer. The service will provide a dedicated online platform for BBC radio content.[125]
11 October – The Office of Fair Trading agrees to fast-track the investigation into Global Radio's purchase of GMG Radio after Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
Maria Miller says the deal will not be investigated for media plurality. The matter is also forwarded onto the
Competition Commission, which oversees business mergers and takeovers.[126] The Competition Commission later announces 27 March 2013 as the date on which it will publish its findings into the takeover.[127]
12 October –
Launch of Heart and Capital TV on Freesat and Sky.[128]
The BBC announces that sports presenter
Clare Balding will replace
Aled Jones as host of Radio 2's faith-based programme Good Morning Sunday from January 2013.[129]
17 October –
BBC Radio 2 axes folk presenter
Mike Harding after fifteen years with the network. He will host his last show on 26 December.[130]
23 October – Ofcom warns west London community station OnFM that it is in "serious and ongoing" breach of its licensing conditions after being off air since 7 September.[131]
30 October – Smooth Radio confirms that Smooth Christmas will return, airing on the Digital One multiplex in the lead up to the festive season, giving the brand three stations on the platform.[132]
November
1 November –
The BBC makes 920 episodes of
Alistair Cooke's Letter From America available for download through its website. The editions represent the entire back catalogue of the series held by the corporation.[133]
BBC London 94.9 presenter
Danny Baker quits his show live on air, and launches a two-hour tirade against station chiefs after learning his regular daily show is to be axed.[134]
5 November –
An advertising campaign for
digital radio featuring a "digital evangelist" named "D Love" is unveiled at a conference at the BBC's
Broadcasting House. Ads for the two-year campaign will air on BBC radio and television, as well as on commercial stations.[135]
10 November – George Entwistle steps down as BBC Director-General following the Newsnight child abuse broadcast controversy.[137]
11 November –
Tim Davie, BBC head of audio and music becomes Acting Director-General following George Entwistle's resignation.[138]
13 November – A parliamentary reception is held to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the
UK Singles Chart, which launched on 14 November 1952. Among guests at the event are
Tony Blackburn and the latest presenter of the Radio 1 Chart Show,
Jameela Jamil.[139]
14 November – To celebrate the 90th anniversary of its first radio broadcast, the BBC linked all stations owned by the corporation around the UK and the world for a three-minute show titled Radio Reunited.[140][141]
16 November –
Magic Network presenter
Dave Lee Travis is taken off air with immediate effect after he was arrested as part of an investigation into sexual offences.[142]
19 November – BBC Radio 2 raises £4,010,974 for
BBC Children in Need, its largest total to date.[143]
22 November –
The BBC appoints
Tony Hall as its new Director-General. He is expected to start in the role in early March 2013.[144]
10 December – Scottish radio presenter
Robin Galloway, who has built a career on making
prank calls suspends sales of his latest CD after a
hoax call made by two Australian presenters to a London hospital treating the
Duchess of Cambridge has taken a tragic turn when a nurse who took the call has been found dead.[149]
14 December –
BBC Radio 1 broadcasts its last show from
Yalding House in London, The Radio 1 Breakfast Show with Nick Grimshaw.[150]
Real and Smooth have secured exclusive broadcast rights to the "Christmas Hit Factory Live" concert, a show featuring artists and groups who achieved success with the
Stock Aitken and Waterman and
PWL record labels. The event is held on 21 December and is aired on New Year's Eve.[151]
15 December –
Celador rebrands its recently acquired
Kestrel FM stations as The Breeze.[152]
Free Radio presents £750,000 to West Midlands charities at its annual music event, Live 2012.[153]
17 December –
Lynn Parsons takes over Smooth Radio's weekday Mid Morning show from Mark Goodier.
David Prever succeeds her as presenter of the weekend Mid Morning slot.[154]
Alternation broadcasts for the final time on
NE1fm after 5 and a half years. It was a part of the station's line up at launch.[155]
18 December –
Bennett, Coleman & Co, the owners of Absolute Radio are reported to be in discussions to sell the loss-making station for £10-£15million.[156]
21 December –
Kerrang Radio counts down to the
End of the World as predicted in a 5,000-year-old Mayan prophecy by inviting listeners to request the songs they'd most like to hear before they die. Christmas music is also banned on the network.[158]