Originally posted by french frank
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I suspect that the Daily Service on R4 longwave has a "pitifully small" audience too, but that's no reason, in my view, why it should be erased from the schedules. It has value in itself; a different kind of value from that which it would have (or, more likely, not have) to a sales team trying to sell airtime in or either side of its "slot" to advertisers. I'm sure it's a remark that's been made many times before (and not least in this forum, I suspect), but it's worth repeating that public-service broadcasting exists to bring programmes to listeners -- while commercial radio exists to bring listeners to advertisers.
But -- getting back to what I was saying earlier about the BBC's being put to shame by a number of its equivalent organizations in other European countries (noting, in passing, that it bedevils the discussion of broadcasting generally that we so often seem to compare ourselves only with the US) -- let's take a look at children's radio (and in particular children's musical programming) in Germany.
- West German Radio (WDR) in Cologne provides a total of 7 hours and 20 minutes a week of children's radio on its WDR 5 channel (not to mention a whole channel for children on digital radio!).
- North German Radio (NDR) in Hamburg provides 3 hours and 10 minutes a week of children's programming on its NDR Kultur channel -- including a weekly 55-minute programme, Mikado am Morgen, devoted to classical music for 7-13-year-olds.
- Bavarian Radio (BR) in Munich also carries around 90 minutes weekly of music programmes for children, Do Re Mikro, on its BR-Klassik channel at weekends, in addition to another 3 hours weekly of children's radio.
And so on. It they can do it, why can't we?
[My apologies for the fact that all of the preceding is, I now realize, well off-topic for this thread. Will you please let me off -- I'm a newbie here -- on this one occasion?]
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