BBC Night Network

The BBC Night Network (sometimes referred to on-air as BBC North FM and originally Radio North East) was an all-evening radio network which linked up the North East England, Yorkshire and the Humber, and later the North West England regions of BBC Local Radio. Each station would share the same programming.

Pre-history

From August 1986 to the launch of the Night Network, the four Yorkshire stations (Leeds, York, Sheffield and Humberside) simulcasted specialist music programmes on weeknights between 6:00 pm and 7:30 pm, extending a year later to six days a week (Wednesday to Monday) between 7:00 pm and 9:00 pm – Tuesday night was reserved for local sports coverage.

History

The BBC Night Network was launched in May 1989 in the then BBC North and BBC North East regions – broadcast on Radio Newcastle, Radio Cleveland, Radio York, Radio Leeds, Radio Humberside and Radio Sheffield between 6:05 pm (6:00 pm at the weekend) and 12:00 am every night. Any local programming broadcast after 6 pm, such as weeknight sport and ethnic minority output, was transmitted only on that station's medium-wave frequencies with Night Network output broadcasting on FM. Weeknight programming consisted of two three-hour shows, the second of which was presented by Martin Kelner. The programme included comedy sketches from Caroline Aherne in which she portrayed the Mrs Merton character and partook in ad-libbed conversations with Kelner. Weekend programming consisted of specialist music shows.

The network was expanded in 1991 to include the four BBC North West stations – BBC GMR (now Radio Manchester), Radio Merseyside, Radio Lancashire and Radio Cumbria. The stations had previously run their own Network North West simulcast service. The Night Network now broadcast from 7:00 pm until midnight with specialist music programmes on-air between 7:00 pm and 10:00 pm (the exception being made for midweek sports coverage) and a late show from Lancaster, presented by Bob Roberts. The late show was extended to 12:30 a.m. a year later and eventually to 1:00 a.m.

When Bob Roberts left the 2200-0100 slot was taken over by a programme called Late Night North. The all talk format was hosted by Mike Parr from the Newcastle studios and later became the biggest talk show in the North with David Dunning hosting a mix of interviews and phone-in in 1997 when Parr moved to Radio Newcastle breakfast. Late Night North would usually come from Newcastle but Dunning would broadcast from York, Sheffield, Hull, Leeds, GMR and Merseyside on regular occasions too. Late Night North, developed by Radio Newcastle editor Tony Fish, was very popular. Eventually after Dunning left and Alex Trelinski had taken over, the show moved to Manchester and a more music based format was introduced when Andy Peebles hosted the programme. In 2002 Yorkshire stations parted from the network to bring back a phone-in with Alex Hall, who had hosted a similar show on Pulse, as presenter.

News

Initially, a single news update was broadcast across the entire network. However, regional bulletins were introduced when the north west stations joined the Night Network. Three separate bulletins were broadcast, lasting exactly five minutes - one for Yorkshire and Humberside, one for the North East and one for the North West. Charles Lees read the news in the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire for BBC Radios Humberside, York, Sheffield and Leeds and Sharon Barbour read the news in the North East area for BBC Radios Newcastle, Cumbria and Cleveland. News bulletins were only broadcast on weeknights.

Jingles

BBC Night Network's jingles were produced by TM Century, now TM Studios. The original package was just for the Yorkshire and the North-East while a second package was produced for the rest of the network.

Current simulcast arrangements

Since the Night Network arrangement was abandoned, the stations involved have taken steps to produce more locally produced programming and in some cases, extend broadcasting hours.

Notable presenters

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.