Feb
28
2010
1

Will the #saveasiannetwork campaign welcome honour campaigners?

After the news broke on Friday that BBC Asian Network faces the axe along with 6 music, campaigns were launched to save the stations.

Both are visible on Twitter, whare the #saveasiannetwork campaign has been attracting regular posts from interested parties including the Asian Network’s Bobby Friction and other artists and producers.

Bobby Friction invited all supporters of the network to email him in order to begin mounting a resistance to the rumoured closure.

I have emailed him to offer the support of MixTogether and members of other established organisations.

If people are serious about campaigning to save the Asian Network, they will need the support of reutable organisations, not just the same artists, DJs and producers who have always been with them. If any future administration is to be convinced of the merits of a BBC Asian service, that service will need a more radical social agenda as well as more listeners. Programming aimed at those who have survived disownment / forced marriage / rejection of a non-Asian partner would deliver both.

A rejection of our offer of help with this campaign would give a clear indication of the direction it is going in.

I hope to hear back from the organisers. They need the credibility that that we have to offer.

Update: there are also Facebook campaign groups here and here.

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Feb
26
2010
6

Asian Network faces axe after tinkering fails to impress.

Reputable Asian Media news outlet BizAsia* reports that the BBC Asian Network faces closure.

Reports are surfacing that the BBC Asian Network has been axed, no official comment from the BBC yet.
The Times claims Mark Thompson, the Director-General, will announce next month the closure of the digital radio stations Asian Network and 6 Music

Recent announcements from Asian Network have all been minor tinkering and insignificant reshuffles. There has been no attempt to bring forward a more radical agenda.

MixTogether has been following the declining fortunes of the station since last year. The management team of Andy Parfitt and Vijay Sharma declined our proposal for a new show aimed at mixed couples, who face significant discrimination in the Asian community. Their failure to embrace the potential of the station to speak to the most vulnerable of Asian listeners is a serious omission that has directly contributed to the loss of this valuable resource.

We wait to hear the full details, and to see whether the BBC can come up with a new offering that is more relevant to the lives of young Asian people in the UK. Mixed relationships are a fact of life, and Asian Media needs to catch up on that fact across the board.

Update: The BBC reports that it doesn’t know what its own report says!

*Reputable, as in they don’t try to manipulate data to mislead their readers.

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Feb
08
2010
4

BBC Asian Network’s poor ratings have sealed the station’s fate.

This week RAJAR, the radio industry’s audience measurement body, published its latest figures for the quarter to December 2009. The results make bleak reading for the BBC Asian Network.

Asian Network Listeners

Asian Network Listeners

Asian Network Listener Hours

Asian Network Listener Hours

In July 2009 the BBC Trust singled out the BBC Asian Network for criticism in its annual report. The station had lost 1/5 of its audience in a year despite spending £25m.

The Evening Standard at the time carried a report by Amar Singh stating that the Asian Network was under threat of closure because of its poor performance:

BBC’s £25m Asian station faces axe after audience plunges

It now seems that closure of the troubled station is all but inevitable. The BBC confided their worries to the Media Guardian on Wednesday before the Rajar results, and the Asian Network itself has been  briefing on panic schedule changes to reputable Asian Media news organisation BizAsia.

Managing Editor of the Station Vijay Sharma has been ‘in hiding‘ as the station’s demise has become public knowledge.

Last year, members of MixTogether drew up a proposal for the Asian Network. It was an idea for a show aimed at mixed race couples, who often struggle when traditional Asian family values are ranged against them. Our proposal was inspired by our work with genuine mixed couples. It was backed by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, Jasvinder Sanghera of Karma Nirvana, Parveen Bird of the Big Issue, mixed race charity People In Harmony and MPs Ann Cryer and Vince Cable. Their letters of support accompany the proposal.

The Asian Network dismissed our idea out of hand.

As with all progressive ideas that the Asian Network could have helped to introduce within the Asian community, our idea was ignored in favour of outdated talkshow debates where the same few callers were always invited to share their negative thoughts on progressive matters. Many of the Asian callers to their mixed race debates expressed opinions that would not have been out of place in a BNP meeting, but this was deemed acceptable in the name of balance. No other BBC station would have allowed such views on air if they had been expressed by white people.

How much more could the Asian Network have done to tackle the scourges of forced marriage, honour crime and disownment that blight the lives of many of their target audience?

It seems that the Asian Network audience was also looking for more from the station than outdated debates and poorly produced underground music, and they have been voting with their feet. Meanwhile the BBC’s black music station 1Xtra enjoys solid ratings, and their artists are Migraine Skanking all the way into the charts.

As Rumbold on Pickled Politics has observed, “there isn’t as much to say about the Asian Network as one might think; it is expensive and losing listeners”

The Network has had the time, money and goodwill to sponsor progressive ideas within the Asian community.

It has squandered all three.

It deserves to fail.

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Feb
01
2010
0

Visitor Statistics – January 2010

Month Unique visitors Number of visits Pages Hits Bandwidth
Jan 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Feb 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Mar 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Apr 2009 0 0 0 0 0
May 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Jun 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Jul 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Aug 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Sep 2009 0 0 0 0 0
Oct 2009 65 113 1369 3523 18.48 MB
Nov 2009 695 1251 5952 9944 100.42 MB
Dec 2009 2113 3314 13173 23924 308.69 MB
Jan 2010 1380 2305 9681 16312 214.14 MB

December statistics were boosted by a link from Iain Dale, but leaving that aside we have still doubled our visitor numbers since November 2009.

Thanks as always to readers and commenters!

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