A timeline of notable events relating to
Bauer Media Audio UK, a British media company established as a division of German company
Bauer Media Group in 2008.
2000s
2008
29 January – Bauer completes its purchase of
Emap's radio, television and consumer media businesses for £1.14bn.[1]
2009
No events.
2010s
2010
No events.
2011
No events.
2012
No events.
2013
6 February – Bauer Media buys the digital station
Planet Rock for a sum estimated to be between £1m and £2m.[2]
15 April – Bauer increases networking on its Yorkshire Magic stations with a networked breakfast show coming from
Magic 828 in
Leeds.[3]
1 July – Bauer's Scottish MW stations start to receive a networked breakfast show from
Glasgow presented by
Robin Galloway. Consequently, there is now no local programming on any of these stations.[4]
29 July – Bauer Media Group announces that it intends to purchase
Absolute Radio from
The Times Group for an amount believed to be between £20m and £25m, pending regulatory approval.[5]
Absolute Radio changes from broadcasting in stereo to mono to make way for Magic on DAB.[6]
31 March –
Ofcom launches an investigation into Bauer Media and Absolute Radio for an alleged breach of its regulations, but no details of the incident are to be released until the investigation is complete.[7]
7 December – Following permission from the regulator, Bauer swaps Radio City 2's format and frequencies with that of
Radio City Talk. This gives
City Network 2 its first berth on FM in England.[8][9]
2016
15 March – Mellow Magic begins broadcasting on the
Sound Digital multiplex and is joined by another Magic spin-off,
Magic Chilled on the 28th.
6 May –
Orion Media announces that they have been bought by Bauer for an undisclosed fee, reportedly between £40 and £50 million.[10][11] This gives Bauer the West Midlands network of
Free Radio stations and East Midlands regional station
Gem 106.
2017
3 January – Bauer Radio's Cash for Kids appeal raises £15.5 million for charity.[12]
2018
3 April –
Aberdeen station
Northsound 2 stops broadcasting on MW. The station continues to broadcast on DAB and online. It becomes the first commercial radio station in Scotland – and the first of Bauer's local stations – to cease analogue broadcasting.[13]
18 April – Bauer Radio announces that, on 4 June, its
Manchester station
Key 103 will be rebranded and relaunched as Hits Radio, a
CHR-led music station aimed at 25–44 year olds.[14] The station will be merged with
The Hits to provide a single national service across the UK on DAB, Freeview and online.[15] In Manchester, Hits Radio will continue to provide local news and information, traffic bulletins and advertising.[16] Hits Radio will also produce and broadcast off-peak programming for
Bauer's network of CHR local stations which will continue to air local programming at peak times.
25 May – Ahead of the launch of
Hits Radio on 4 June, the name
Key 103 disappears from the
Manchester airwaves.
4 June – Following the renaming of Key 103 to Hits Radio,
Key 2 is renamed Key Radio.
Greatest Hits Radio replaces the Bauer City 2 branding. Individual station identities in Northern England are dropped and are rebranded to GHR with Scotland unaffected. The new network extends to the West Midlands although
GHR West Midlands continues to air a weekday three-hour local show.[18][19]
5 February – it is announced that Bauer has acquired over thirty further stations to its network by way of the purchase of
Lincs FM Group and
Celador Radio. Several of the purchased stations, including
KCFM in East Yorkshire, are sold on to
Nation Broadcasting due to overlap with existing Bauer assets (in KCFM's case,
Viking FM.)[20]
8 February – The
Wireless Group sells its network of local radio stations in England and Wales to Bauer Media.[21]
5 March – Bauer purchases the ten FM stations owned by
UKRD. The deal includes the purchase of three local DAB multiplexes.[23]
5 April – Bauer launches
Country Hits Radio which is broadcast on a number of local DAB multiplexes.
2 September – Bauer begins to network its
Hits Radio Manchester weekday drivetime show on all but one of its
Hits Radio stations in England, leaving only the weekday breakfast show as a local show,[24] following the removal in July of the one remaining local weekend programme.[25]
18 November – Absolute Radio launches its sixth decades-only station,
Absolute Radio 10s which, unlike its sister stations, operates exclusively online.[26]
14 April – Bauer Radio takes full control of Celador Radio,
Lincs FM Group, Wireless Group local stations and
UKRD Group.
1 May – Bauer Radio takes 100% share in First Radio Sales.
27 May – Bauer announces that the majority of the stations it acquired from UKRD, Lincs, Wireless and Celador will be joining the
Greatest Hits Radio network from September, clustered to provide regional programming outside of network hours. Four of the acquired stations will join the
Hits Radio network, retaining local names and a daily breakfast show, and three stations – Lincs FM, Pirate FM and SAM FM Bristol – will continue as largely standalone stations.[28]
30 June – Bauer switches off the MW transmitters which had been carrying
Absolute Classic Rock since the start of 2019. Consequently, Bauer is no longer broadcasting on MW in the West Midlands.
28 August – Bauer launches
Hits Radio Pride, aimed at the LGBTQ+ community.[31] This is the first time that a major radio broadcaster in the United Kingdom has launched a station that is targeted to the LGBTQ+ community.
31 August – Bauer closes
Leeds station
Radio Aire after 39 years on air. Its frequency is, from the following day, used to carry Greatest Hits Radio.[32]
1 September – The majority of the stations that Bauer Media acquired the previous year from
UKRD[33] –
Lincs FM Group,[34]Wireless Group[21] and
Celador Radio[35] – join
Greatest Hits Radio, clustered to provide regional programming outside of network hours, consisting of three hours each weekday teatime.[36] All of the affected stations lose their individual station names.
24 February – Bauer Media enters into an agreement to buy
Communicorp, the Ireland-based company that owns brands including
Today FM and
Newstalk. The agreement is subject to approval from the regulator, and excludes Communicorp's UK radio stations which are operated under the Global name.[40]
2 March – Bauer Media receives Ofcom approval to network all programming between
CFM and other Bauer stations in the north west.[41]
7 March – Ofcom gives Bauer Radio approval to add its newly acquired Plymouth licence to its South West Approved Area of radio stations.[42]
31 March – Following the
death of Sarah Everard, Bauer Radio streams a special panel show titled We Need to Talk About Women's Safety simultaneously across its stations at 8pm.[43]
26 April – Bauer switches off its medium wave frequencies in Lancashire, Greater Manchester, Leeds and Humberside, following the launch of Greatest Hits Radio on FM in those areas.[44]
4 May – Bauer Radio announces plans to launch premium online subscription services to compliment
Scala Radio,
Jazz FM,
Planet Rock and
Kerrang! Radio, with an extra 20 stations available ad-free and with extra content.[45]
Greatest Hits Radio launches on FM in London, on the frequency that carried Absolute Radio. Bauer is able to make the change following permission from Ofcom to swap Absolute Radio with Greatest Hits Radio.[47]
Bauer Radio is granted regulatory approval to purchase
Communicorp, with the deal completing on 31 May.[48]
1 June – Bauer Media announces the completion of its acquisition of Communicorp.[49]
17 June – Bauer purchases
Stockport-based
Imagine FM and announces it will add the three licences it purchases to the
Greatest Hits Radio network,[50] further expanding GHR's coverage of the Greater Manchester environs and into north Derbyshire (where GHR already occupies the former
Peak FM). The switch takes place on 1 September 2021.
25 September – Bauer Radio becomes Bauer Media Audio UK.
2022
16 February – The online output of Bauer Radio's stations goes down for around half an hour just before 8am because of an internal update to their streaming service.[51]
27 May –
Bauer Media announce plans to launch a subscription service for
Absolute Radio and
KISS, allowing listeners to access commercial-free content for a monthly fee.[52]
The RadioToday website reports that
Bauer Radio is refurbishing the studios of
Wave 105 near Southampton in preparation for it to become the company's South Broadcast Centre.[53]
14 July –
Bauer Media launches a subscription service for Absolute Radio and KISS, allowing listeners to access commercial free content for a monthly fee as well as brand spin-off stations, such as Absolute Radio Acoustic and Absolute Radio Classic Country.[52][54]
24 October – Bauer Media moves
Radio Borders from Galashiels to the new Edinburgh headquarters. News, sport and weather, as well as Greg and Lynsey at Breakfast will continue to broadcast to the Radio Borders area.[57]
23 January – Absolute Radio stops broadcasting on AM.[59] Consequently, Absolute Radio will become a digital-only station.[60]
14 February – Ofcom revokes the mediumwave licence from Absolute Radio following Bauer's decision to cease broadcasting on its AM frequency.[61]
20 March – Bauer launches a regional Greatest Hits Radio service for Cambridge, Peterborough and Suffolk on DAB ahead of proposed changes to its FM frequencies in the area.[62]
11 July – Ofcom gives Bauer Media permission to change KISS Radio to Greatest Hits Radio on three of its four FM frequencies in the East of England. Kiss will continue on FM in Norwich.[68]
17 July – Bauer Media announces plans to acquire the
Jack FM licences in Oxfordshire,[69] something that will lead to the 106.4FM, 106.8FM and 107.9FM frequencies being rebranded, possibly as
Hits Radio and
Greatest Hits Radio, following the acquisition, subject to regluatory approval.[70]
1 August – Bauer signs a deal with
Audible to promote its content.[71]
11 August – Bauer signs a deal with
Samsung to become the sponsors of the Magic Radio Breakfast Show.[72]
Bauer announces that it is switching its stations which broadcast on the
Sound Digital multiplex to the DAB+ format to make way for the national launch seven more stations – Absolute Radio Country, Absolute Classic Rock, Kerrang!, heat, Magic Chilled, Magic Soul, and Magic at the Musicals. The changes will happen later in the autumn.[75][76]
Vivian Mohr is appointed as President of Bauer Media Audio UK, replacing Richard Dawkins.[77]
23 October – Bauer introduces Hits Radio programming to
Lincs FM with the single exception being its breakfast show, which remains a local programme.[79]
28 November – The Radio Today website reports that Bauer Media is to remove all of its radio stations from
Sky,
Virgin Media and
Freesat TV platforms by 13 December.[81]
11 December – Bauer shuts down all of its remaining MW Greatest Hits Radio transmissions.[83]
13 December – Bauer removes all of its radio stations, including Greatest Hits Radio, from the Sky and Virgin Media TV platforms.[84]
18 December – Bauer places the offices of Stoke-on-Trent's
Signal 1 on the market for £600,000, having taken the decision to move the station's broadcasting team to Birmingham.[85]
2024
January –
The final local programming on Lancashire's
Rock FM and Liverpool's
Radio City ends when the two stations' breakfast shows merge.[86]
Bauer drops local news bulletins from its Salisbury frequencies of
Greatest Hits Radio South, on the grounds that they sound "jarring and parochial" alongside networked programming. They are replaced with regional bulletins from
Wave 105.
20 February –
GB News announces it has ended its radio advertising and sponsorship contract with
Bauer Media, and that it is launching its own advertising sales operation.[87]
27 February – Bauer announces plans to rebrand
Wave 105 as Greatest Hits Radio South Coast and
Pirate FM as Greatest Hits Radio Cornwall.[88]
March – Salisbury-specific bulletins on the Salisbury frequencies of Greatest Hits Radio South on weekdays are reinstated.[89]
2 April – Bauer removes its radio stations from
Freeview TV platform.[90][91]
16 May – Bauer Media Audio UK's new headquarters at The Lantern near London's
Euston Station is officially opened.[93]
24 June – Bauer launches Rayo, a new audio platform that enables online listeners to stream 50 Bauer stations.[94]
16 July – Bauer Media announces plans to rebrand
Scala Radio as Magic Classical and
Magic Chilled to Hits Radio Chilled, with the changes taking effect later in the year.[95]