For those of you who didn't know, I started out my working life in radio, I aspired to be a features producer for 6 Music, making obscure shows about Velcro and milk for a tolerant yet music loving audience.
As with many I started out working in commercial radio and my path changed before I got a chance to fulfill my radio dreams. I do however have a great amount of respect for this place. You'll see paps outside trying to get a sneaky snap of the celebs wondering in and out as well as the common geeky technician that keeps the whole thing running but who no one recognises. Inside it's awesome, like a rabbit warren of offices and studios leading into each other.
The best thing about the BBC radio is that they have specialist channels like 6 Music and the Asian Network that cater for the masses of music nerds out there who strive to discover something a little different. I mean, isn't that what radio should be all about if it wants to compete in a world of Spotify and FineTune? The fact the the BBC has decided to cut funding here makes me sick to my stomach. There are so many talented producers and presenters out there who want to make these shows for a public who are demanding them, it seems so unfair that the funding has been taken away.
As part of my degree I looked into the influence and affect of the internet on modern day radio, a case study into the changes of "on air" in the past 10 year. A resounding conclusion to this is that specialist station need to stay around to insure we don't end up with a generation listening to playists with electronic gnomes finding us new music instead of real people. Video killed the radio star? Looks more like the fat cats at the BBC who did it. read more