Tags

CBC Radio 2 protests on Youtube

Archives


« | Main | »

Colin Eatock on CBC’s classical music debacle

By admin1 | September 6, 2011

reprinted from Colin Eatock blog post with permission

http://www.colineatock.com/1/post/2011/09/post-title-click-and-type-to-edit1.html

Picture

Audience: small to smaller.
This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In this, some people will find plenty to celebrate: after all, the CBC has done a lot since it went on the air as a radio service in 1936, providing Canadians with news, sports and entertainment – and generally doing it well.One thing they used to do well was classical music. Of course, they don’t any more – not since they gutted classical programming on CBC Radio 2.It was almost exactly three years ago today that the CBC completed the dismantling of its largely classical schedule. Despite the vocal protests of classical-music fans across the country – which should have told CBC executives how dear the network’s programming was to its listeners – they chopped what used to be a full day of classical music down to a shadow of its former self. (While they were at it, they also shut down the CBC’s record label, and jettisoned the CBC Vancouver Orchestra.)One of the reasons the CBC gave for this change was the low ratings that Radio 2 consistently received. Averaged nationally, the network failed to attract much more than a 3 percent audience share. In other words, considering all the radio stations that 100 anglophone Canadians might be tuned to at any given time, CBC Radio 2 could be expected to have about three people listening in.CBC execs decided they needed to attract a new, younger audience, and, to this end, filled the Radio 2 schedule with a variety of popular music shows. (“Singer-songwriters” are much indulged.) So, three years after the revolution, how is Radio 2 doing?

The organization that collects audience statistics for radio is BBM Canada (formerly known as the Bureau of Broadcast Measurements). On their website, I found some interesting stats, broken down by various Canadian cities. If we compare statistics for the spring of 2007, when programming was still largely classical, with numbers for spring 2011, here’s what we find for Radio 2.

(The following statistics are for the only five Canadian cities for which BBM Canada provides a detailed analysis in both 2007 and 2011.)

  • Toronto: down from 1.8 percent to 1.3 percent
  • Montreal: down from 3.5 percent to 2.5 percent
  • Calgary: down from 2.2 percent to 2.0 percent
  • Edmonton: down from 5.3 percent to 2.3 percent
  • Vancouver: down from 6.5 percent to 3.5 percent

Based on these statistics, it doesn’t seem that Radio 2 has increased, or even maintained, its former share of listeners anywhere. So much for building new audiences – although the CBC certainly did a fine job of alienating its old audience!

I’d wish the CBC a happy birthday – but I don’t think classical music lovers in Canada have a lot to celebrate, where Radio 2 is concerned, these days.

© Colin Eatock 2011

Topics: Articles about CBC | No Comments »

Comments

You must be logged in to post a comment.