BBC Summery
there are two different types of radio stations commercial and public service. Commercial radio stations can be national, local, global and independent. Public service are radio stations such as the BBC where it is licence funded and has no commercials. A station profile includes the stations identity and also logo and cross-platform and marketing.
Speech-primarily based radio summery- There are more than one genres of radio stations, which include dialogue, local news and documentary. each of those genres use distinctive sorts of conventions to attraction with the listeners, along with a presenter, contributor, studio or out of doors declares. A distinguished radio enterprise example will be the BBC. The identity of the BBC is that its a public carrier radio station because of this its funded via the authorities and the general public with licensees and subscriptions, its cause depending on the a couple of various radio stations in the BBC, includes news declares, tune, interviews, sports and many others. The BBC's cross-platform advertising consists of billboards, posters, celeb promoting, audio bulletins and television classified ads.\
Commercial/Public Service - Commercial radio service can be national, local, global or independent and is usually funded by the amount of views or listeners that tune in to that station such as Capital or Kiss radio station . Public service are license funded and contain no commercials because of this, an example of a public service radio organisation would be the BBC. For example BBC itself is a good example The Station profile is the identity of the station, this means the visual aspects of the station such as their logo, their cross-platform marketing and their scheduling.
The multiple stations of the BBC have multiple radio stations, the audience for these stations are such as radio 1 extra, radio 4 and radio 5. The station radio 1 extra is a speech-based radio station which just focuses on just talking and focusing and specialising urban music, most of which include interviews with upcoming UK musicians allowing them to perform on the station live by doing a freestyle on a chosen beat of the host and to try to put themselves out there more, whilst also talking about their career and how they begun their love of creating music. The target audience for this station would be for people interested in urban music. in Radio 4 broadcasts a wide variety of spoken-word/speech-based programmes including the news, dramas, comedies, science and history. Radio 5 is a radio station that specialises in the live BBC news, phone-ins, interviews and sports commentaries. This station would be for those who are mostly interested in sports. The Audience of Radio 1 are normally young people teenagers, as they play similar music of what they would listen to, such as raps etc. Radio 5 is based on sports so this audience would be based to all who listen and like sport. Radio 4 target audience are based to old people as it talks about dramas and what is going on in this drama. It also has documentaries based on the environment as well which young people would not be interested in.
Late Night Women is a late night edition of the long-running, BBC Radio 4 programme Woman's Hour. It started in 2015 with a one month pilot run, scheduled twice weekly on Thursday and Friday at 11 pm for one hour. The presenters for this first run were Lauren Laverne and Jane Garvey who led panels of five guests in a friendly discussion of a particular topic of interest that is covering the work at that time such as fan fiction or lust. Lauren Laverne then became the permanent host when the programme started a regular schedule in 2016 she is 40 years of age and still continues to do the show till this day The thumb nails of the videos you can tell that if the part of the video and the topic of the video is serious. Sometimes she is smiling and other times she is un happy and all the time she is happy you can tell she is not talking about that subject not as serious and when she is unhappy she talks about it really serious.
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