1967 in British radio

This is a list of events in British radio during 1967.

List of years in British radio (table)
In British television
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
In British music
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
In British film
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970

Events

January

  • No events

February

  • No events

March

April

  • No events

May

June

  • No events

July

  • No events

August

  • 14 August – The Marine Broadcasting Offences Act is passed, making it an offense to advertise or supply an offshore radio station from the UK. This results in the closure of all of Britain's offshore pirate radio stations with the exception of Radio Caroline, which moves its supply operation to the Netherlands.

September

  • 17 September – First broadcast of The World This Weekend on the BBC Home Service.
  • 30 September – BBC Radio completely restructures its national programming: the Light Programme is split between new national pop station Radio 1 (modelled on the successful pirate station Radio London) and middle of the road Radio 2; the cultural Third Programme is rebranded as Radio 3; and the primarily-talk Home Service becomes Radio 4. Radio 1 is launched at 7:00 am with Tony Blackburn's Daily Disc Delivery show (theme tune: Johnny Dankworth's "Beefeaters") and the first track played is The Move's "Flowers in the Rain".

October

November

December

  • 22 December – Panel game Just a Minute is first aired on Radio 4 with Nicholas Parsons as chairman (initially as a temporary stand-in); Parsons continues to chair the show until shortly before his death in 2020.

Unknown

  • University Radio York obtains a testing and development licence as "Radio Heslington"; it becomes the United Kingdom's second student radio station, and also the country's first independent radio station.

Station debuts

Closing this year

Programme debuts

Continuing programmes

1940s

1950s

1960s

Ending this year

Births

Deaths

  • 1 June – Derek McCulloch, children's radio presenter (born 1897)
  • Unknown – Douglas Ritchie, radio news editor and wartime propaganda broadcaster (born 1905)

See also

References

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