No more WRS on FM

Ceasing from September http://worldradio.ch/wrs/news/wrsnew...er.shtml?35594

No more WRS on FM from September

World Radio Switzerland will cease to exist on FM radio as of September.

The Federal Council made the decision to release the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation from its obligation to further fund and operate WRS.

The SBC announced last year that it was looking for private entities to purchase the FM and digital radio licenses of WRS. Neither bidder has been chosen for the FM license, however, Anglo Media will take over the digital aspect in September.

The decision means that there will be no FM-frequency English language radio station in Switzerland as of September.

It’s not clear at this point until what date WRS will broadcast in its current form on FM.

Damn shame if you ask me.

Just as I discovered WRS

Digital, cable (?) or internet.

what frequency does this run on? Is it available in the east?

http://worldradio.ch/

It's very likely the beginning of the end for WRS - again. The loss of FM will mean loss of listeners and thus ad revenue. In its previous guise as World Radio Switzerland, it failed with FM.

I guess it can stagger on with DAB+ and cable, but it really needs to decide what it is. As a very occasional listener on DAB+ the mix of US NPR, BBC World Service and current rock does not appeal. I can listen to all those and more directly...

No, the FM was only broadcast to Geneva and parts of Vaud. You might be able to get it on DAB+ though.

It's hardly a surprise - covering just GE/VD only gets you a small fraction of the available English speakers in Switzerland.

I only listened to it in hotels abroad, but never back in Switzerland. I cannot understand why it was only broadcast in such a narrow corner of Switzerland

Because it started as WRG, G for Geneva, and operated as a local english language radio station for years. The move to WRS is very recent in its 15+ or so years of existence, and as it ended up, was a rather ill planned and bumpy test drive to nowhere. In my view, it was never a success as WRS, but was a good local radio as WRG for more than a decade. I do not know if it can ever go back to being just WRG, but that would be my preference. It always operated on FM frequency 88.4, and upon becoming WRS, they changed the frequency to 101.7, which I had understood would increase the distribution to more parts of CH, but maybe that was not true in the end.

I heard an interview with somebody from WRS on the radio this morning.

They'll be cutting half the staff once the FM broadcast is switched off and she didn't seem too optimistic about the long term future to be honest. Their aim was to reach out to all English speaking residents of Switzerland and she didn't think they'd really achieved that and remained somewhat restricted to the Geneva/Vaud area. Nevertheless she said they were proud of their achievements over the years.

It is a real shame that WRS is going. Effectively once it goes of FM, it will die.

I do hope Radio Frontier can get access to a FM frequency though for the GE/VD Region.

Up here in Basel, well, since 2001 The English Show on Radio X 94.5, cable, live steaming and podcast still goes on.

www.TheEnglishShow.com

The latest and last statement from the WRS Pro bono Group.

'World Radio Switzerland to shut down in August

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Dear friends and supporters,

On 31 August 2013 World Radio Switzerland, Swiss Radio of The Year 2012 and recent winner of five Edward R. Murrow radio journalism awards in the US, will go off air.

For the first time since 1996, there will be no Swiss-based English-speaking radio on FM in the Lake Geneva area. WRS in its current public radio format will cease to exist. We know that you share our profound disappointment and consternation about this unexpected outcome.

The Swiss Federal Council’s announcement earlier this week to close WRS was the official response to the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation’s request of last year to be released from its obligation to maintain WRS in its public service portfolio and to pursue the privatization of the station. In a surprising move, the Council chose not to attribute the FM frequency to either of the two finalist bidders, the WRS Pro Bono Group and Anglo-Media. The WRS Pro Bono Group had decided early on not to pursue a bid that excluded the FM frequency because we believe it would not be economically viable. This was stated in our bid. Consequently, the DAB+, internet and satellite segments were automatically offered to commercial operator Anglo-Media, which will have the right to use the WRS name if it wishes.

We regret that at no point during the process was the WRS Pro Bono Group offered the opportunity to make a presentation of its plan to officials of the Swiss communication authority, OFCOM, who advised the Federal Council in its decision. We are convinced that we had an excellent proposal to carry WRS forward as a foundation-owned, public-interest, non-profit radio, and would have liked the opportunity to address concerns they may have had.

So many WRS listeners have left kind and supportive comments on the station’s website and Facebook page, talking about what the station has meant to them as a new arrival to Switzerland, a long-time expat or a native Swiss who enjoys hearing about their own country from a knowledgeable but different perspective. Listeners affectionately referred to WRS as their “morning companion”, a “treasured resource”, and a “lifeline” to understanding their new home and its culture and politics. Others appreciated stories that paid tribute to the contributions of the international community to the life of Switzerland. Many noted the steady progression of the station’s reporting, information and entertainment value since its conversion to public service. To us, it is clear that the station’s mission to help integrate the international community into the life of the country was more than amply accomplished. The increase in audience numbers that won WRS the Swiss Radio of the Year award in 2012 also attests to the station’s growing influence and relevance.

We are truly saddened that WRS’s current and potential contribution to Switzerland’s image went largely unrecognized and unappreciated among those responsible for deciding WRS’s fate. Last Wednesday, on a sunny morning in Bern, it probably took less than 15 minutes for the Federal Council to strike WRS from the airwaves.

Evidently, we were all hoping for a different conclusion. From the bottom of our hearts, we thank you for your enthusiastic support over the last year.

This will be our last email.

The WRS Pro Bono Group."

www.supportwrs.org

What I had in mind was something different with a similar name

Swiss Radio International (SRI) is to broadcast its last shortwave and satellite radio programmes on October 30, 2004. As SRI goes off the air after nearly 70 years, a chapter in Swiss radio history comes to an end. swissinfo/SRI will in future focus exclusively on its multimedia news and information platform, www.swissinfo.org , which is available in nine languages.

Swiss Radio International first broadcast to the world on shortwave in 1935. The station made a name for itself as a neutral voice of authority during the Second World War and throughout the Cold War. Programmes were broadcast in nine languages (German, French, Italian, Romansh, English, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic and Esperanto). During this time, SRI established itself as one of the most high-profile and popular international radio broadcasters.

The end of the Cold War, coupled with the advent of satellite technology and the Internet revolution, spelled the end of the shortwave era. At the end of the 1990s, and following a strategic change of direction which was approved by the Swiss government in 1999, swissinfo/SRI started to transform itself into a multimedia enterprise. The decision was taken to phase out radio output and develop an online presence, although audio reports and interviews are still available on the website.

The multimedia news and information platform www.swissinfo.org was launched in March 1999. Today it is available in nine languages (German, French, Italian, English, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic, Japanese and Chinese). The change of strategy has paid off: today, www.swissinfo.org registers around 8.5 million page views each

month.

Nicolas Lombard, the director of swissinfo/Swiss Radio International, admits that radio cannot be replaced. “But with our internet platform, www.swissinfo.org , we can offer a range of information that was simply not possible on the air. What we provide today is a wide range of news and stories from and about Switzerland, presented in a way which was unthinkable in the past,” said Lombard.

But...who listens to FM radio anymore?

Cheers,

Nick

I still listen to FM radio.... Without WRS on the FM, I think my English is going to be worst....

???

Many people

Only people on hiking or biking tours, people enroute by motor-car, and people on the lake, and this means only few people. Not enough people to attract advertisers. And FM stations are limited to relatively small areas.

An FM station can survive if it has sufficient local roots, and by "local" I mean area within a 50km radius

The station I mentioned above was NOT FM/UKW but on short-waves with a heavy emphasis on international reports and NOT on CH-internal information. They changed their whole approach and now look as follows

http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss_ne...l?cid=35643542

When I looked things up systematically I found that WRS GE/VD was launched practicallly after the market had collapsed. Three major factors :

> expansion of the internet

> vastly improved mobile computers and mobile phones

> governments after 1991 no longer interested in radio services

-

So that they

http://worldradio.ch/wrs/news/wrsnew...el.shtml?35616

have various option, primarily involving improvements to their WEBsite. As they inevitably will be in competition to Swissinfo they could

- improve international reporting based on a combined Swiss-English view

- improve local reporting about centres of interest in Switzerland, like

Geneva, Lausanne, Basel, Luzern, Zürich, Lugano and that in all cases would have to include good information about

- events

- entertainments

- bars+restaurants

- affairs like new bridges, new tram and bus and train lines

- new public transport stations

- new petrol stations (ENI exAGIP, SOCAR exESSO, etc)

- new roads and highways, or closed ones

Clear is that the recipe of WRS GE/VD was a cul-de-sac (Sackgasse)

Radio is generally in a mess!

We were supposed to be losing FM completely by 2015, to be replaced Europe-wide with DAB. So the UK plough off and has some 40 stations on DAB, France uses a different system, so UK DAB car radios don't work there - the same with Switzerland, as we are now 99% DAB+. Germany even stopped developing DAB a couple fo years ago as no one seemed interested.

Meanwhile radio makers are screwing the public with grossly inflated prices for DAB/DAB+ sets - compare prices with FM sets.

Swiss radio stations are all the same - out to get the maximum audience, so all play the same mix of top 40/recent oldies. I challenge anyone to tell the difference just by listening to Energy, Radio 24, Radio Zurisee, Radio 1 or any independent station in the land.

The only light at the end of the very boring tunnel is that the likes of Spotify and Internet Radio, already offering true niche listening at home should be available in-car within a year or two.

How did radio get in this mess??

Radio started to get into a mess when TV arrived

the apparatus of the Granddad of a schoolfriend of me, the first such "machine" in a diameter of 2 kilometers had TWO positions. LEFT = ARD (Allgermeiner Rundfunk Deutschland) and RIGHT SRG = Schweiz. Radio+Fernseh Gesellschaft. ZDF was not yet existing, and the first satellites "Sputnik 1" etc were just to be launched

B U T already, radio started to suffer. While Schwawinski launched his RADIO UNO, I expect many of the provincialist-primitive "Lokalradio" to get out of business within the next 10 years. To tackle the future with methods out of the "Fin-de-Siècle" hardly is the way to go

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and then to your other question. HOW did Radio arrive where it is now ? Everybody gave priority to get ahead with TV, while radio was zero-priority. Private companies who wanted to do radio were sentenced to work per FM/UKW in a local area. Many of them started on that recipe and in order to be closer-to-base started to broadcast in dialect. Which had TWO hick-ups

A) As most of commercial Switzerland is in a "border-zone" to broadcast in dialect means that people accross the national border and accross the dialect-border are no longer interested

B) Any speaker who speaks a "wrong" dialect will drive listeners away

Young people generally have mobile-phones with them, enabling them to get internet and tv and radio directly. Radio-stations on MediumWaves/Mittelwelle and LongWaves/Landwelle and ShortWaves/Kurzwelle are difficult to get in a motor-car or in a train. This problem was known since the 60ies. But was never overcome, in spite of the crap circling this globe somewhere above.

Radio technology has not much improved since the days of the first Sputniks and the days of Yuri Gagarin !