1980 in British radio

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2023}}

{{Year topic navigation|1980|British radio|British television|British music}}

This is a list of events in British radio during 1980.

Events

=January=

  • 2 January – BBC Radio 3 launches a new, extended teatime programme Mainly for Pleasure. The two-hour long programme replaces the much shorter Homeward Bound.[https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/radio3/1980-01-02 BBC Genome Project – Radio 3 listings 2 January 1980]
  • 13 January – Forces request programme Family Favourites is broadcast on BBC Radio 2 for the final time.

=February=

  • BBC Radio Wales launches the first of two permanent community opt-out stations, Radio Deeside, after successful community radio experiments in 1978. The reopening is in response to the closure of the Shotton steelworks.

=March=

  • 19–20 March – {{MV|Mi Amigo}}, the ship from which the pirate radio station Radio Caroline is broadcast, runs aground and sinks off the Thames Estuary.
  • 31 March – BBC Radio 1's broadcast hours are cut back. The station starts broadcasting on weekdays an hour later and Saturday evening programming ends. The station simulcasts BBC Radio 2 during this additional downtime although by the end of the year Radio 1 has stopped broadcasting Radio 2 through the night.

=April=

  • 11 April – CBC in Cardiff becomes the first of the second tranche of Independent Local Radio stations to start broadcasting. It is the first new ILR station since 1976.

=May=

=June=

  • No events.

=July=

  • No events.

=August=

  • No events.

=September=

  • September – Due to the continued expansion of BBC Local Radio, the regional news bulletins, broadcast in England four times a day Monday to Saturday on BBC Radio 4, end, apart from in the south west which is the sole part of England which still does not have any BBC local service.

=October=

=November=

  • 14 November – Radio Tay begins broadcasting to the Perth area.
  • 15 November – The very last episode of BBC Radio 4 sketch comedy show The Burkiss Way, "Wave Goodbye to CBEs the Burkiss Way", lampoons what the writers considered to be the BBC's obsequious approach to the Queen Mother's 80th birthday celebrations, and its first repeat transmission is cut by 6 minutes on the instructions of the station controller.{{cite web|title=The Burkiss Way|url=https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Radio/TheBurkissWay|work=tv tropes|accessdate=2024-10-25}}

=December=

  • 1 December – BBC Scotland carries out a one-week experiment in breakfast television. It is a simulcast of BBC Radio Scotland's breakfast show Good Morning Scotland.[https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/schedules/bbcone/scotland/1980-12-01 BBC Genome Project BBC1 Scotland listings 1 December 1980]
  • 6 December – Andy Peebles records an in-depth interview with John Lennon in New York City for BBC Radio 1, two days before Lennon's murder.

=Undated=

Station debuts

Programme debuts

Continuing radio programmes

=1940s=

=1950s=

=1960s=

=1970s=

Ending this year

Births

Deaths

  • 9 February – Renée Houston, actress (The Clitheroe Kid) (born 1902){{cite book|author=John Parker|title=Who's who in the Theatre|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lslBAQAAIAAJ|publisher=Pitman|page=746}}
  • 26 April – Dame Cicely Courtneidge, actress (Discord in Three Flats) (born 1893)
  • 23 June – John Laurie, actor (The Man Born to Be King) (born 1897)
  • 24 July – Peter Sellers, actor, comedian and radio personality (born 1925)
  • 22 August – Norman Shelley, actor (born 1903)
  • 6 October – Hattie Jacques, actress (Educating Archie, Hancock's Half Hour) (born 1922){{cite book|last=Merriman|first=Andy|title=Hattie: The Authorised Biography of Hattie Jacques|year=2007|publisher=Aurum Press|location=London|isbn=978-1-84513-257-6|pages=205–8}}
  • 19 October – D. G. Bridson, radio producer and author (born 1910){{cite book|title=The Listener|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2stBAQAAIAAJ|date=July 1980|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|page=615}}
  • 20 October – Isobel Barnett, broadcasting personality (born 1918; suicide)
  • 8 December – Charles Parker, documentary producer (born 1919)

==See also==

References