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Wednesday 15 September 2021

ADVICE – ALWAYS READ THE TERMS & CONDITIONS OF A COMPETITION YOU ARE ENTERING ON THE RADIO

 I was listening to Jaz and Laura on Spin 1038's Zoo Crew yesterday evening (14/09/2021) enjoying the music and the banter, then they announced a text competition for a prize of € 20,000. The question posed was fairly simple,

‘What country does ABBA hail from, Sweden or South Africa?’

I sat at a set of traffic lights and momentarily considered pulling over and dispatching a text entry but HOLD ON A MINUTE!!!

 

Each text entry would cost me an expensive € 2.50 plus the standard message rate of your provider. In a period of tight financial constraints that seemed excessive for a local radio station, so let’s take a moment to drill into the competition.

 

The competition was not aimed at just the listeners of Spin 1038 (Dublin) but also at the Go Loud stable of stations owned by Bauer Media. This competition was being aired over Spin 1038, Spin Southwest, 98 FM and national stations Newstalk and Today FM for the period 13th – 17th September 2021. In the last pre-covid JNLR figures issued the weekly listenership figures for those 5 stations was 2,336,000[1]. That equates to less than 3% of Spin 1038 listeners who would have to text an entry for the €20,000 to be recouped and a profit made. If that is applied across all the Go Loud stations and 3% of all listeners entered this easy to answer competition then € 175,000 would be generated for the company less costs.  (1% of all Bauer Ireland listeners entering would generate €58,400 for the radio company)

 

Bauer Media has taken over the portfolio of Communicorps stations but according to their track record on Trust Pilot with a rating of 1.4/5 leads perhaps a word of advice is required,

ADVICE – ALWAYS READ THE TERMS & CONDITIONS OF A COMPETITION YOU ARE ENTERING ON THE RADIO



[1] Today FM 877,000 – Newstalk 804,000 – Spin 1038 275,000 – 98FM 231,000 – Spin South West 149,000


Friday 10 September 2021

2BE Commercial Sabotage by 2RN

 

When 2RN took to the airwaves on January 1st 1926, two stations now operated on the island with 2BE broadcasting from Belfast. As soon as 2BE took to the airwaves in September 1924, the listening public south of the border demanded a domestic service from the Irish Free State government. They listeners demanded something different from apparently British and Unionist slanted output from the Belfast station. There was a sense of nationalistic pride in the opening of 2RN and while initially signal power would not see them as competitors to each other, their competition did however play out on the pages of the most read newspapers north and south of the border.

 

An unusual night of programming took place on both 2BE[1] and 2RN[2] on Friday February 19th, just weeks after the launch of 2RN. When 2RN began broadcasting in January transmission times were just two hours, 8pm until 10pm. By the beginning of February one hour had been added, 2RN now broadcasting from 7.30pm until 10.30pm. Programming from the Dublin station consisted mainly of instrumental and operatic music which led to complaints appearing in newspapers and trade magazines and comparisons being made with 2BE and British mainland stations.

 

On that Friday night, 2RN began with a tuning note at 7.30 allowing listeners both to tune in and identify the station. Two fifteen minutes talks were then broadcasts, the first one on Egypt, the second on savings certificates. From 8pm for the following 90 minutes 2RN relayed 2LO from London. Dublin listeners were treated to the Hungarian String Quartet, Vivienne Chatterton, Soprano who performed a number of Hungarian folk songs and readings by Dorothy Warren.

From BBC Genome

Meanwhile at exactly the same time on 2BE in Belfast from 8pm and heavily advertised in both the Northern Ireland newspapers and the Radio Times, a ‘Concert by the Dublin Artists’. The Belfast station was clearly audible in Dublin with a stronger transmitter than 2RN’s at McKee Barracks. The 2BE show consisted of performances by Gerard Crofts, Baritone, Jean Nolan, Mezzo Soprano and already a seasoned radio performer on 2RN, Arthur Darley[3], Violinist and the stage comedian and humourist Jimmy O’Dea[4].  The 2BE proved extremely popular with listeners, with Dublin listeners complaining about both the content of the relay from London and the quality of the rebroadcast. The Belfast Newsletter reported,

‘A troupe of instrumentalists give a concert this afternoon at the 2BE studios when many popular musical numbers will be included. A select quartette of Dublin artists (two vocalists, a violinist and an entertainer) are visitors at the station this evening, when an astonishingly comprehensive programme of Irish folk and other music will be broadcast between 8 O’Clock and 9.30.’

 


It was important for the new medium of broadcasting that listeners could read the schedules in the daily newspapers. There was an antipathy towards the Unionist leaning Belfast station from Dublin newspapers. This manifested itself when the two broadcasters clashed for listeners on that Friday. The Evening Herald published its ‘Broadcasting’ schedule but to divert attention from the obvious attraction of ‘Dublin Artists’ for Dublin listeners, they purposely inserted the 2RN schedule into the middle of the 2BE programme. It was an attempt to draw readers and possible listeners to the 2RN broadcasts rather than Belfast, it was commercial sabotage.

The Evening Herald February 19th 1926


[1] 440m Medium Wave

[2] 390m Medium Wave

[3] Played on 2RN’s opening night broadcast on January 1st 1926 and died December 1929

[4] Identified in the papers as James O’Dea