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BBC Radio WM
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | BBC Radio WM | |
| logo | BBC Radio WM logo 2022.svg | |
| city | Birmingham | country = England |
| area | West Midlands and south Staffordshire | |
| airdate | 9 November 1970 | |
| frequency | FM: 95.6 MHz | |
| DAB: 11B (Black Country and Shropshire) | ||
| DAB: 11C (Birmingham) | ||
| Freeview: 714 | ||
| former_frequencies | 828 MW | |
| 1458 MW | ||
| rds | BBC WM | |
| callsign_meaning | British Broadcasting Corporation Radio West Midlands | |
| format | Local news, talk, music and sport | |
| former_names | ||
| language | English | |
| owner | BBC Local Radio, | |
| BBC West Midlands | ||
| licensing_authority | Ofcom | |
| website | BBC Radio WM |
DAB: 11B (Black Country and Shropshire) DAB: 11C (Birmingham) Freeview: 714 1458 MW BBC West Midlands
BBC Radio WM is the BBC's local radio station serving the West Midlands conurbation, an urban area centred on Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Solihull, and the Black Country in England.
It broadcasts on FM, DAB, digital TV and via BBC Sounds from studios at The Mailbox in Birmingham. It is broadcast primarily from the Sutton Coldfield transmitting station in Birmingham.
According to RAJAR, the station has a weekly audience of 193,000 listeners and a 2.2% share as of December 2023.
History

The station launched as BBC Radio Birmingham on 9 November 1970 and on 23 November 1981, the station changed its name to BBC WM to reflect that the station broadcasts to a wider area than just Birmingham. This date also saw the station launch a second MW transmitter to improve MW reception in Birmingham.
A short-lived service called WM Heartlands ran between early 1989 and 1991 serving the 'Heartlands' area of East Birmingham using the 1458 medium wave frequency. It ran as an experiment, opting out from 8 am until 12 am. Further wavelength splitting took place later in 1989 when on 30 October 1989, the BBC Asian Network launched as a part-time service on MW and in 1996, the Asian Network became a full time service. Consequently, at this point, BBC WM stopped broadcasting on MW.
In the 1990s, as an economic measure, BBC WM took over BBC Coventry & Warwickshire in Coventry and Warwickshire. On 3 September 2005, CWR resumed the production of separate programming between 5 am and 10 pm each weekday (6 am to 6 pm at weekends).
Until 2004, BBC WM was broadcast from the Pebble Mill studios, in Edgbaston. On 4 July that year, the station moved to the new BBC Birmingham city centre offices in The Mailbox. Its facilities include two broadcast studios, a talk studio, an operations and production area, and a studio shared with the BBC Asian Network.
BBC Radio Wolverhampton

On 15 January 2021, BBC Radio Wolverhampton launched as a temporary sister station. The service provided eight hours of opt-out programming for listeners in Wolverhampton and the surrounding area each weekday until 31 March 2021.
Technical
The service is broadcast across the West Midlands on 95.6 FM and DAB from the Sutton Coldfield transmitting station situated north of Birmingham.
It also broadcasts on Freeview TV channel 714 in the BBC West Midlands region and streams online via BBC Sounds.
The county of Staffordshire does not have its own designated BBC Local Radio so it is served by 3 different stations: mid and north Staffordshire is served by BBC Radio Stoke, East Staffordshire is served by BBC Radio Derby and south Staffordshire is served by BBC Radio WM.
Programming
Local programming is produced and broadcast from the BBC's Birmingham studios from 6 am to 10 pm on Mondays to Saturdays and from 6 am to 6 pm on Sundays.
Off-peak programming, including the late show from 10 pm to 1 am, is simulcast across all BBC Local Radio stations across England.
During the station's downtime, BBC Radio WM simulcasts overnight programming from BBC Radio 5 Live
Notable presenters
- Gordon Astley
- Malcolm Boyden
- Tony Butler
- Carl Chinn (1994–2012)
- Alan Dedicoat (1979–1983)
- Ed Doolan (1982–2017)
- Adrian Goldberg (2003–2006, 2010–2017, 2018–2020)
- Alex Lester (2017–2020)
- Stuart Linnell
- Janice Long (2000–2010)
- Andrew Peach (2008–2011)
- Peter Powell (1970–1975)
- Les Ross (1970–1976, 2005–2009)
- Sunny and Shay (2014–2020)
- Tim Smith
- Graham Torrington (2012–2020)
- Tony and Julie Wadsworth
- Jenny Wilkes (1982–2019)
- Ed James
References
References
- "RAJAR". RAJAR.
- [https://news.bbc.co.uk/local/birmingham/hi/tv_and_radio/newsid_8957000/8957168.stm ''BBC WM: The first 40 years'']
- [https://transdiffusion.org/2024/11/23/radio-birmingham-new-name-new-look/ Radio Birmingham: New Name, New Look]
- "BBC Radio WM Heartlands".
- (8 November 2010). "BBC WM – 40th anniversary". BBC Birmingham.
- "BBC Radio in Wolverhampton is changing on Friday 15th January 2021 {{!}} Help receiving TV and radio".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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