Newsbeat

Newsbeat is the BBC's radio news programme broadcast on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 1Xtra and BBC Asian Network. Newsbeat is produced by BBC News but differs from the BBC's other news programmes in its remit to provide news tailored for a specifically younger audience.[1]

Newsbeat
GenreNews
Running time15 minutes
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Language(s)English
Home stationBBC Radio 1,
BBC Radio 1Xtra,
BBC Asian Network
Produced byBBC News
Edited byDebbie Ramsay
Recording studioBroadcasting House, London
Original release10 September 1973 – present
Audio formatStereophonic sound
Websitewww.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat

The fifteen-minute Newsbeat programme is broadcast at 12:45 and 17:45 during the week on Radio 1, 1Xtra and Asian Network. Short bulletins are also heard throughout the day on three stations on the half-hour with extra bulletins broadcast at peak times.

History

BBC Radio 1's remit as a public service broadcaster meant it had to broadcast news. Newsbeat was launched on 10 September 1973 in response to the launch of a network of commercial radio stations across the UK which supplied a news service very different from the style of traditional BBC News. The programme's first presenter was the Radio 1 DJ Ed Stewart and he was succeeded by Laurie Mayer and Richard Skinner.[2]

Although unconfirmed by the BBC, it is widely thought that the name "Newsbeat" was taken from the Radio Caroline news service of the same name, as was the concept of short bulletins on the half-hour. Caroline first used the name (and broadcast half-hourly headlines) in the 1960s. Roger Gale, who had previously worked on Radio Caroline North, was one of the show's first producers. The launch editor was Mike Chaney.

Following changes in September 2012, the vast majority of Newsbeat bulletins are simulcast on both BBC Radio 1 and 1Xtra. Previously, bulletins on 1Xtra were bespoke and branded as '1Xtra News', with bulletins on the half-hour (as with Newsbeat), but with 15 minute programmes at 12:30 and 5:30, a quarter of an hour before the Radio 1 equivalents. Each station continues to have bespoke bulletins during the weekday breakfast show, before shared bulletins begin at 10:30.[3]

Newsbeat won Gold for Best News & Current Affairs Programme at the Radio Academy Awards on 13 May 2013.[4]

It is believed that BBC World Service will pilot a global edition of Newsbeat, a bulletin aimed on the station aimed at younger listeners.[5]

Newsbeat's The Story of Izzy Dix was named Podcast of the Year at the UK ARIAS 2016.

Bulletins

Newsbeat has short bulletins broadcast on Radio 1, 1Xtra and Asian Network (Asian Network was added and merged due to staff shortages, as well as the BBC wanting to streamline news during the COVID-19 pandemic)[6] throughout the day, as well as the 12:45 and 17:45 main programmes. These are simulcast, following budget cuts that came into effect in September 2012. Prior to this, weekend news bulletins had been simulcast for quite some time. Additionally at this time, the number of bulletins was cut back somewhat, dropping the news at 04:30 and 05:30 during the Early Breakfast show on weekdays. There also used to be bulletins at midnight, which were stopped at some point prior to this. They are read by one newsreader, but in the past there would be a news reader and a sport reader during breakfast and drivetime bulletins on weekdays and breakfast bulletins at weekends. Bulletins are usually 2–3 minutes in length, and feature news and some sports stories, and weather during the breakfast show bulletins.

The format of Newsbeat bulletins varies throughout the day. Breakfast updates consist of full news, sport and weather; throughout the day it will be only the news and some notable sports stories. The 13:30 bulletin is notable for being read by a different newsreader every day due to the main newsreader being on lunch at that time. Popular folklore says that the last person remaining in the Newsbeat office at lunchtime has to read the 13:30 bulletin. Full sport updates begin at 15:30. Bulletins are more scaled back at weekends, with brief stories and sport during every bulletin throughout the day, and one newsreader reading the news for the whole day.

There was also an entertainment news round up at approximately 07:40 and 09:40 during The Radio 1 Breakfast Show with Nick Grimshaw, often hosted by Sinead Garvan. This continued when Nick moved to drivetime with one bulletin at 16:40. Entertainment news slots at 12:00 during Fearne Cotton's show and at 18:30 during Greg James' show were dropped in 2015.

In November 2017, the 16:30 bulletin on weekdays was shortened and the 17:00 bulletin dropped altogether. In addition, the 22:00 bulletin was brought forward to 21:00, and the 16:30 and 17:30 bulletins on Saturdays were also dropped.

The current bulletin times are as follows:

WeekdaysWeekends
06:30* / ****
07:00*
07:30*07:30
08:00*
08:30*08:30
09:30*09:30
10:3010:30
11:3011:30
12:30
13:3013:30
14:3014:30
15:3015:30
16:30
21:00** / ***

- * indicates the bulletin is not simulcast on Radio 1 and 1Xtra. As such, these bulletins occasionally start up to a few minutes later than the times stated. (However, during the coronavirus outbreak, all bulletins were simulcast on 1, 1Xtra and Asian Network.)

- ** indicates the bulletin does not exist on Fridays

- *** indicates that the bulletin was dropped during the coronavirus outbreak.

- **** indicates that the bulletin was only cast on radio 1.

Bank holidays follow a weekend bulletin schedule. Weekdays during the Christmas and New Year period follow a weekend bulletin schedule with the addition of bulletins at 16:30 and 17:30. Bulletins on Christmas Day are hourly from 07:30 to 12:30.

Location

In keeping with its specific targeting of young audiences, Newsbeat has its own set of reporters and studios based at Radio 1 in Broadcasting House in Central London. Many of the stories produced by Newsbeat are reported by other programmes across BBC News.

Newsreaders and reporters

There are various presenters and reporters on Newsbeat including Roisin Hastie, who took over from Tina Daheley as newsreader on Breakfast Show with Greg James and Ben Mundy who took over from Chris Smith as the main host of the 1245 and 1745 programmes in August 2018. Chris remains with Newsbeat as an editor and cover newsreader.

  • Debbie Ramsay (Editor)
  • Paul Stanworth (Deputy editor - planning)
  • Toby Sealey (Assistant editor - video)
  • Chris Smith (Duty Editor, former main presenter)
  • Roisin Hastie (Breakfast newsreader)
  • Sinead Garvan (Entertainment and covers 1245/1745 programme)
  • Natalie Wyatt (Office manager)
  • Steffan Powell* (Gaming)
  • Simon Mundie (Sport)
  • Ben Mundy (Main presenter)
  • Steve Holden* (Duty editor and music)
  • Meabh Ritchie (Social media producer)
  • Jimmy Blake (Multi-media reporter)
  • Nesta McGregor*
  • Daniel Rosney
  • Cath Burns (Duty editor)
  • Hannah Morrison* (Duty editor)
  • Tamsyn Kent (Duty editor)
  • Duncan Middleton* (Duty editor)
  • Tracy Ollerenshaw* (Duty editor)
  • Kat Collins*
  • Nomia Iqbal*
  • Nick Rotherham*
  • Jim Connolly (Politics editor)
  • James Waterhouse*
  • Eleanor Roper (Sport)
  • Gurvinder Gill*
  • Lindsay Brown*
  • Will Chalk*
  • Shiona McCallum*
  • Christian Hewgill*
  • Jim Farthing (Researcher)
  • Matt Wareham (Multimedia technical producer and video)

An * indicates the person regularly reads the 1330/2100/weekend bulletins, or covers for Roisin/Ben on morning/afternoon bulletins.

Previous newsreaders and main presenters include Carolyn Atkinson, Claire Bradley, Tina Daheley Claire Cavanagh, Dominic Byrne, Georgina Bowman, Anna Foster, Tulip Mazumdar, Chris Smith, and Declan Harvey.

Previous sports reporters include Arlo White, David Garrido, Juliette Ferrington, Mark Chapman, Tina Daheley, and Carrie Davis.

There is a long-running tradition of the DJ on air at the time chatting to the newsreader following their bulletin. Chris Moyles, often shamelessly flirted with the female newsreaders for comic effect, and built up a good on-air relationship with afternoon newsreader Dominic Byrne, who later went on to join him on the BBC Radio 1 and Radio X breakfast shows. Greg James also built a good relationship with Chris Smith through chatting following news bulletins.

Editors

Debbie Ramsay is the current editor of Newsbeat and is responsible for all its output across BBC Radio 1, 1Xtra, BBC iPlayer and online. Newsbeat's executive editor was former daytime editor of BBC Radio 5 Live and editor of the Victoria Derbyshire programme on BBC Two and the BBC News Channel Louisa Compton until 2018.[7][8]

Rod McKenzie, himself was a former presenter of the programme and the news presenter on Simon Mayo's former breakfast show on Radio 1 from 1988-1993, and was an editor until 2014, when he was moved to another position within the BBC after bullying allegations.

Newsbeat's first editor was Mike Chaney - hired from The Sun by the Director-General to inject a populist flavour to the news coverage of Radio 1.

Imaging

Newsbeat is notable for the distinctive musical imaging it has used for most of its history. At first, this was a just jingle at the beginning of the bulletin, but in the late 1990s this expanded to music throughout. There are different beds for news, sport and weather. The news imaging used to be changed every year, but this changed to every two years in 2005, and the most recent imaging package was on air from 2015-2017.

On airProduced byTagline
Jan 1998 – Dec 1998Vibe Music Audio Imaging97-99FM Radio 1 - Newsbeat
Jan 1999 – Dec 1999Vibe Music Audio Imaging97-99FM Radio 1 - Newsbeat
Jan 2000 – Feb 2001Vibe Music Audio ImagingNewsbeat
Feb 2001 – Jan 2002Vibe Music Audio ImagingRadio 1 - Newsbeat
Jan 2002 – Jan 2003Vibe Music Audio ImagingRadio 1 - Newsbeat
Jan 2003 – Jan 2004David LoweRadio 1 - Newsbeat
Jan 2004 – July 2004David Lowe / Radio 1 in house productionBBC Radio 1 Newsbeat
August 2004 – January 2005David Lowe / Radio 1 in house productionBBC Radio 1 Newsbeat
January 2005 – December 2006Music4Radio 1 Newsbeat
January 2007 – January 2009Music4Digital, FM, Online - This is Radio 1
January 2009 – June 2011Music4 / Radio 1 in house productionDigital, FM, Online - This is BBC Radio 1
June 2011 – January 2015KoinkListen, Watch, Share - This is BBC Radio 1/1Xtra (as appropriate)
January 2015 – June 2017Daniel Mumford MusicThis is BBC Radio 1/1Xtra (as appropriate)
June 2017 – present Daniel Mumford / Radio 1 in house production 1/1Xtra/Asian Network (as appropriate)

Newsbeat's Oddbox

In 2007, Newsbeat's Oddbox was launched. A four-minute video which looked at the week's strangest news, it was mostly presented by Dominic Byrne. When he was unavailable Tulip Mazumdar[9] and Natalie Jamieson as deputy. Old episodes are available to watch at BBC Online, on the BBC Red Button and on the BBC News channel. The last ever episode of Oddbox was released on 14 September 2012, to coincide with Byrne leaving Radio 1.[10]

Parody

Satirist and broadcaster Christopher Morris parodied the 1990s presentational style of Newsbeat as "Radio 1 Newsbanger". Some of these parodies were actually broadcast on Radio 1, though most featured in the Radio 4 comedy series On The Hour.[11]

In 1997, Morris further parodied Newsbeat by rearranging sentences of existing Newsbeat broadcasts to create nonsensical and blackly comic headlines, as part of a one-off segment on Blue Jam. Unlike On The Hour, Blue Jam was broadcast on Radio 1.

References

  1. BBC Radio 1 Service Licence BBC Trust, August 2009; Retrieved 31 March 2010
  2. "Radio 1 Newsbeat celebrates 40 years of broadcasting". Newsbeat. 10 September 2013. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  3. Deans, Jason (27 March 2012). "BBC News cuts – at a glance". The Guardian.
  4. "BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat wins Sony Radio Academy Award". Newsbeat. 14 May 2013. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  5. "RadioToday". http://radiotoday.co.uk/2014/02/newsbeat-goes-global-on-bbc-world-service/. 18 February 2014. External link in |website= (help)
  6. https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2020/news-coronavirus
  7. "BBC announces new Editor of BBC Newsbeat and 1Xtra". Newsbeat. 14 May 2013. Archived from the original on 29 March 2014. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
  8. "New digital-first TV show for Victoria Derbyshire". Newsbeat. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  9. Oddbox presented by Tulip
  10. The last ever Oddbox
  11. Chris Morris Music Shows Episode Guide
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.