I can no longer see the BBC Radio schedules on the BBC homepage. Is this a problem that has occurred on my PC or has something changed of which I am unaware? If so, where are they now?
Help Please - BBC Radio Schedules
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostI can no longer see the BBC Radio schedules on the BBC homepage. Is this a problem that has occurred on my PC or has something changed of which I am unaware? If so, where are they now?
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostThank you. Hidden away in the corner on "sounds" it says "schedules", hardly noticeable among the garish photographs. Perhaps we are also intended to think of television as "pictures".
p.s. for me "annoying changes" is tautology.
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I think it was under Mark Thompson that Radio and Television became Audio and Vision, only to be changed back to Radio and Television under Tony Hall. The online equivalent now seems to be Sounds and iPlayer.
I thought Sounds was going to be this new app, to which Radio 3 is going to contribute - hang on a tick - where "BBC Radio 3 is planning to target the Spotify generation with “mood mixes” and classical music playlists aimed at bringing calm to the stressful lives of the young" [Times, October 12]
"There will be mixes available on Sounds that might be mood-based,” [the controller] told The Times. “When you arrive at work and there’s 400 emails and you want something to get you through it, classical music is really good at that. But it’s also really good if you want to sit back and listen."
Mr Davey said that the app would allow people who may never think of switching on Radio 3 to discover the station’s content. He insisted that the young would embrace classical music if they were guided through it.
“In genre terms, young people have very fluid tastes. Providing something grabs them, there isn’t a prejudice,” he said, adding that the contemporary music on offer on the station included jazz from south London and “neo-classical ambient music”.
A comment from a reader (not me - I don't have access ) : "I suggest that if the BBC want to make classical music more appealing to the young they should think about playing it on stations that the young are actually listening to - most of the younger generation don't even know that Radio 3 exists. Some classical music on the television would help as well - contrast the coverage of the Leeds Piano Competition recently with the usual coverage of Glastonbury - 1 1/2hours (every 3 years) compared with an entire weekend almost every year."It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI think it was under Mark Thompson that Radio and Television became Audio and Vision, only to be changed back to Radio and Television under Tony Hall. The online equivalent now seems to be Sounds and iPlayer.
I thought Sounds was going to be this new app, to which Radio 3 is going to contribute - hang on a tick - where "BBC Radio 3 is planning to target the Spotify generation with “mood mixes” and classical music playlists aimed at bringing calm to the stressful lives of the young" [Times, October 12]
"There will be mixes available on Sounds that might be mood-based,” [the controller] told The Times. “When you arrive at work and there’s 400 emails and you want something to get you through it, classical music is really good at that. But it’s also really good if you want to sit back and listen."
Mr Davey said that the app would allow people who may never think of switching on Radio 3 to discover the station’s content. He insisted that the young would embrace classical music if they were guided through it.
“In genre terms, young people have very fluid tastes. Providing something grabs them, there isn’t a prejudice,” he said, adding that the contemporary music on offer on the station included jazz from south London and “neo-classical ambient music”.
A comment from a reader (not me - I don't have access ) : "I suggest that if the BBC want to make classical music more appealing to the young they should think about playing it on stations that the young are actually listening to - most of the younger generation don't even know that Radio 3 exists. Some classical music on the television would help as well - contrast the coverage of the Leeds Piano Competition recently with the usual coverage of Glastonbury - 1 1/2hours (every 3 years) compared with an entire weekend almost every year."
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostIt's not just the younger generation. When I mention Radio 3 to people of my generation (i.e. aged 65+), in almost every case they say 'Oh, do you mean Classic FM?'Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostSadly my experience too!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostIs the controller senior enough to conjugate verbs as he wishes?
That was alo commented on by Times readers.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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