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The News Quiz is a British topical panel game broadcast on BBC Radio 4, [1] first broadcast in 1977. The show, created by John Lloyd from an idea by Nicholas Parsons, has seen several hosts, including Barry Norman, Barry Took, Simon Hoggart, Sandi Toksvig, and Miles Jupp.
Between 17 January 1991 and 2 March 1991 FM broadcasts were replaced by a continuous news service devoted to the Gulf War, Radio 4 News FM, with the main Radio 4 service transferring to long wave. Before this, Radio 4's FM frequencies had occasionally been used for additional news coverage, generally for live coverage of statements and debates ...
When Coalition forces began military operations against Iraq following the invasion of Kuwait on 2 August 1990, the BBC discontinued to broadcast usual mixed schedule on Radio 4's FM frequencies and replaced it with a rolling news service known by the emergency staff as Scud FM, [5] named after "Saddam Hussein's most notorious weapon" was the Russian-made missile in which Iraq was firing at ...
The pips are available to BBC radio stations every fifteen minutes, but, except in rare cases, they are only broadcast on the hour, usually before news bulletins or news programmes. Normally, BBC Radio 4 broadcast the pips every hour except at 18:00 and 00:00 (at the start of the Six O'Clock News and Midnight News respectively), and at 22:00 on ...
BBC Radio 4: C224 80-128 kbit/s Mono / joint stereo News, drama and speech 92.5 - 96.1 MHz 103.5 - 104.9 MHz 198 LW BBC Radio 5 Live: C225 64-80 kbit/s Mono: Live news and sport 693, 909, 990 kHz and BBC Local Radio overnight BBC Radio 6 Music: C22B 128 kbit/s Joint stereo Alternative music — BBC Radio 1Xtra: C22A 128 kbit/s Joint stereo
Here’s the quiz for news that happened the week of July 1: Editor’s note: The questions and answers in this quiz were written by an artificial intelligence using previous Tri-City Herald articles.
There is widespread opposition to the BBC's plans to launch a rolling news service on Radio 4’s long wave frequency and the proposals are dropped. A new news and sport service BBC Radio 5 Live launches the following year. 18 December – BBC 2 broadcasts the Arena special "Radio Night", an ambitious simulcast with BBC Radio 4. [35] 1994
When BBC Radio 4 took over the longwave frequency from Radio 2 on 23 November 1978, the Shipping Forecast was moved to Radio 4 to keep it broadcasting on longwave. As part of the BBC's plans to switch off BBC Radio 4 longwave transmissions, it reduced daily broadcasts of the Shipping Forecast to the FM simulcast schedule of twice on weekdays ...