Level 3 example exam question (15 marks)
- hutchinsont16
- Mar 4, 2022
- 4 min read
I do not necessarily agree with the statement in question 1 that popular music radio programmes struggle to gain recognition as Public Service Broadcasting. The Radio 1 Breakfast Show provides for its under 30 adult audience a diverse and varied selection of content, although it does focus on popular music. Radio 1 is branded the nation's favourite station and historically has had popular music at the heart of its public service remit. The Radio 1 Breakfast Show with Nick Grinshaw celebrated its 50th Anniversary in 2017. For fifty years BBC Radio 1 has championed great British music, breaking some of the biggest and most important acts of all time and throwing its support behind talented artist regardless of genre, from rock and pop to dance and grime.
According to the BBC Trust website, the remit of Radio 1 is to entertain and engage a broad range of young listeners with a distinctive mix of contemporary music and speech. Its target audience is 15-29 year olds and it should also provide some
programming for younger teenagers. This remit remains part of the public service remit set up by Lord Reith in 1927 and still
holds today - to inform, educate and entertain. Operating under this remit, the BBC Radio 1 Breakfast Show is funded by the
licence fee which gives BBC popular music radio programmes more scope and range in terms of content and access to star*
guests. It also gives it more options for modes of distribution, for example, via livestreaming and podcasts on Player radio,
Player on TV and extra content on digital stations and more outside broadcasts and events.
The content of the BBC can be streamed via the internet or you can download multiple episodes of first run series via the BBC
Player Radio App. For example, the podcast which features the best bits from Nick Grimshaw's BBC Radio 1 Breakfast Show is
released every week on a Friday featuring the funniest stuff and highlights from celebrity guests, such as, Sam Smith and Pink.
This on demand service is provided for free under the licence fee and is set up as a subscription.
Despite this expanding provision of service, the Radio 1 Breakfast Show has come under criticism for its falling number of
listeners. According to Rajar it has affected the programme's status by seeing audiences drop to just over 5 million listeners,
which is the lowest audience for nearly twenty years. This may be seen as an example of how The BBC Radio 1 Breakfast Show
with Nick Grimshaw is losing its popular appeal especially in justification of the BBC licence fee payment.
According to the BBC Radio academy website, though, it's still the number one discovery place for musicians such as the
Arctic Monkeys, and it explains that the internet has changed the way the music industry works forever but radio is still at
the heart of it - radio is as important as ever. In today's segmented 'listening' market, successful programme managers must
already know their target audience and the brand values of the Radio 1 Breakfast Show. These should attract and hold their
attention, through its energetic style and popular content, including the music and celebrity culture it promotes through the
presenter Nick Grimshaw, who is the voice of the show. This is clearly illustrated by the content of the show on Friday 2nd
March; there is the popular feature of the The Nixtape, for example, which sees Grimshaw select 30 minutes of party-oriented
music before a DJ comes in to mix listener requests to close the week.
According to Radio 1's controller Ben Cooper, Radio 1 is evolving with its young audiences as we live through changing
times for traditional radio. There have been record figures for Radio 1 videos on Facebook with 80 million monthly views, and
1.4 billion total views on Radio 1's YouTube channel. Although traditional radio audience ratings show a gradual decline in listeners, online media has raised the profile of BBC Radio 1 and the Breakfast Show in a different way - meeting the needs of
a young digital-savvy online audience.
The Radio 1 Breakfast Show also contains in its running order regular news reports in the form of Newsbeat. The broadcast
on Friday 2nd March begins with the news and targets its news in both style and content at young audiences; this is evident
in the selection and register of the information provided and the tone of the news presenters when reporting. This style
and content of news aimed at young audiences is also embedded in the presentation of news on the Newsbeat website.
Traditionally news is not targeted at younger audiences and has often been packaged for adults, especially with scheduled
breakfast shows. Newsbeat packages news aimed at the under 30s - fulfilling the remit of providing information in the public
sphere for young people and genuinely, I believe, involving them as citizens.
In summary the Radio 1 Breakfast Show does have popular music at the heart of its broadcast and this is evident in the diverse
and global music policy that it has. On the 2nd March broadcast, approximately 60% of the playlist was music by British
artists or bands and the genre of music included pop, grime, indie rock and dance music from both British and International
artists. Furthermore, in February the show promotes and covers the Brit Awards and September is the Live Lounge music
month. Politically this may be seen as 'a waste of the taxpayers' money but it is in line with the very principles of how Radio 1
formed over 50 years ago, using popular music to appeal to a wider audience. This ethos is promoted by the Radio 1 Breakfast
Show today whilst it still retains a commitment to tie-in features such as the BBC weekender, live social event coverage such
as Wimbledon. Also on the BBC website there are regular educational features with the presenter Nick Grimshaw visiting
schools. The BBC is misunderstood if the fee-paying public believes the BBC is simply about popular music - at the heart of
Its revised remit is the commitment to bring diversity and cultural creativity in its music to represent all communities in the
UK and promote British nationality on a global scale. The licence fee and the principles of public service broadcasting are the
foundation which protects BBC Radio 1 and the Breakfast Show from the commercial pressures and influence of ownership
in independent radio. The biggest challenge that the Radio 1 Breakfast Show faced was how to keep a media savvy under-30
audience in a technologically changing online media environment - one that I think it has achieved.

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