According to RAJAR, the station has a weekly audience of 55000 listeners and a 0.5% share as of May 2024. The worst performer of all BBC local stations. .[1]
The Mendip transmitter, near Wells, used to broadcast BBC Radio Bristol on 95.5 MHz over a very large area but, from 3 December 2007, this was transferred to the new BBC Somerset service. Since the BBC relaunched BBC Somerset on FM, BBC Radio Bristol has been left free to concentrate editorially on Bristol, Bath and the rest of the former Avon area.
On 11 December 2014, the station launched on Freeview channel 719, on the PSB 1 multiplex from the Mendip transmitter and its TV relays.[2] The station also streams online via BBC Sounds.
The AM transmitter at Mangotsfield on 1548 kHz was closed in February 2016.
Programming
Weekday programming is produced and broadcast from the BBC's Bristol studios from 6 am to 2 pm each day. The afternoon programme is shared with BBC Radio Somerset.
Weekday evening programmes are all shared across the BBC West region.
At weekends, all programmes except Saturday sport are either regional or national.
The late show, airing every day from 10 pm to 1 am, is a national programme originating in either Manchester or London.[3]
BBC Radio Bristol simulcasts overnight programming from BBC Radio 5 Live between 1am and 6am.
Presenters
Notable past presenters
Kate Adie and Michael Buerk produced and presented programmes for BBC Radio Bristol as part of the station's launch team in the 1970s. Buerk's voice was the first to be heard on the station.[4]
Kenny Everett was a presenter during the early 1970s. He pre-recorded his shows from his farmhouse in Sussex.[5]
Comedian Chris Morris worked for the station in the late 1980s, presenting and producing his own weekend show, No Known Cure. He was dismissed from the station after "talking over the news bulletins and making silly noises".
One of the station's longest serving presenters was veteran local journalist Roger Bennett, who joined at launch as a reporter, before going onto present its flagship breakfast programme, Morning West, from 1974 to 2003. He continued to freelance at Radio Bristol until his death in July 2005.[6]
Other past presenters include Susan Osman, who also co-presented Points West for 14 years, and John Turner, who worked on the station between 1978 and 2007.[7]
John Howard, who produced and co-wrote the station's 1979 comedy programme That Was The West That Was, was a regular presenter on the station in the late 1970s and went on to be one of the main presenters of You and Yours on BBC Radio 4.
Doctor and comedian Dr Phil Hammond presented a Saturday morning show called Saturday Surgery for 12 years, but was taken off air in August 2018 after announcing his intention to stand for Parliament.[9]
In November 2008, BBC Radio Bristol presenter Sam Mason was dismissed following an incident in which it was alleged that she had made racist remarks in an off-air phone conversation during a weekday afternoon show. Whilst phoning a taxi firm in order to send her 14-year-old daughter from Mason's Clifton home to her grandparents' home, she was said to have asked the company not to send an Asian driver.[10]