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6 Music saved from closure

BBC Trust says that 'the case has not been made' for digital station's closure – but no reprieve for Asian Network

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Lauren Laverne
Lauren Laverne hosts BBC 6 Music's mid-morning show. Photograph: Rex Features

A vocal campaign to save BBC 6 Music from closure was rewarded today when the BBC Trust said the digital music station will stay open.

The trust said it was opposed to a proposal put forward in March by the director general, Mark Thompson, as part of a wide-ranging strategy review.

However, the BBC Trust said it would accept a formal management proposal for the closure of 6 Music's digital sister station, BBC Asian Network, provided that it included alternative plans for meeting the needs of this ethnic minority audience "in different ways".

It said 6 Music was encouraging the take-up of digital radio among listeners, describing it as a "highly distinctive" service that represents "value for money" and is "well liked" by its audience.

The BBC Trust said there had been "significant public support for the service" and that 78% of nearly 50,000 online responses to a consultation on the BBC's future focused on 6 Music. The trust also received more than 25,000 emails and nearly 250 letters about the station, "the great majority" of which opposed the closure plan.

It said BBC managers should be increasing 6 Music's average audience of around 600,000 weekly listeners rather than shutting the station down.

The trust also said 6 Music does not represent a threat to commercial competitors. "Throughout the period of our consultation we have received no evidence from the commercial radio sector to suggest that 6 Music represents any kind of threat either now or in the future, so long as it remains true to its distinctive remit."

BBC executives should consider the future of 6 Music as part of a wider examination of how best to improve the performance of its network of digital radio stations.

"The trust concludes that, as things stand, the case has not been made for the closure of 6 Music," the trust ruled. "The executive should draw up an overarching strategy for digital radio. If the director general wanted to propose a different shape for the BBC's music radio stations as part of a new strategy, the trust would consider it. The trust would consider a formal proposal for the closure of the Asian Network, although this must include a proposition for meeting the needs of the station's audience in different ways."

Ruling on the other elements of Thompson's strategic review of the BBC's activities, the trust said it endorsed the proposal to cut the corporation's online budget by 25%, contingent on being able to "understand and approve the editorial changes involved".

"The BBC should sharpen online's focus so that it is truly distinctive and has clearer editorial vision and control," the trust added.

Thompson's plan to close Blast!, a cross-media service aimed encouraging the creative skills of teenagers, was supported by the trust. The BBC's governing body said it would leave the decision on the future of BBC Switch, the cross-media brand providing content for younger viewers, to management.

On Thompson's proposals for the BBC's TV networks, the trust said it saw no need "for radical changes to the current portfolio". "But the BBC needs to identify future tipping points where reassessment of the structure will become necessary, such as full digital switchover in 2012 and 50% of viewing on a non-linear basis. The BBC has more to do to ensure programmes are truly high quality and distinctive."

Sir Michael Lyons, the BBC Trust chairman, said: "The director general presented us with a thoughtful set of proposals earlier this year in support of a clear future vision for the BBC – a vision the trust supports because it is rooted in the BBC's enduring mission to inform, educate and entertain audiences with programmes and services of high quality, originality and value.

"In order to deliver that vision we have concluded that the BBC must accelerate changes to its behaviour, leading to a clearer definition of the boundaries within which it operates as it makes the transition to the digital future.

"The end result will be a BBC that focuses on its two main obligations to the public – to provide distinctive public service content and to use their money wisely."

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  • poshtim poshtim

    5 Jul 2010, 11:33AM

    Yet more confirmation the license fee is a waste of my money.

    Try sticking to your guns BBC rather than bowing down to the pressure of elitist music snobs.

  • huntaaar huntaaar

    5 Jul 2010, 11:37AM

    This comment has been removed by a moderator. Replies may also be deleted.
  • muldoon84 muldoon84

    5 Jul 2010, 11:39AM

    I'm okay with the Asian Network closing, but the funding should be ringfenced and used to serve the Asian community in better ways.

    Excellent news about 6 Music. I'd been holding off buying a digital radio when this announcement was made.
    This is a good day.

  • Jaibo Jaibo

    5 Jul 2010, 11:40AM

    _Try sticking to your guns BBC rather than bowing down to the pressure of elitist music snobs._

    I would hardly describe the music and listeners served by 6 Music as elitist - it is still mere pop music, after all...

  • djhworld djhworld

    5 Jul 2010, 11:40AM

    @poshtim

    It's quite a simple process really, stop paying the license fee, remove your television. Stop listening to the radio. Close your curtains. Don your tin foil hat. Sit in the corner of your house rocking back and forth with the mantra 'elitist music snobs will not ruin my fun'. You might be posh Tim, but you do quite sound dim.

    In the meantime, great success for BBC6music. The best story to come out of the news today.

    I mean come on lets be realistic, the Big British Castle spend £6million a year to run 6music. That's a fraction of the cost of management (£22m)! So I'm glad the BBC Trust saw some sense.

    I'm also glad to hear that 78% of the correspondence the BBC received was about 6music. Good work black squadron!

  • feline1973 feline1973

    5 Jul 2010, 11:44AM

    I don't think they were ever going to close it anyways - it was all just a double-bluff conspiracy to promote the station and raise its profile.

    Most people had never heard of it before, and didn't know what it did.
    Now anyone remotely interested in good music has heard of it and knows it as a cause celebre.

  • Berella Berella

    5 Jul 2010, 11:44AM

    On a personal level I agree with the result, but can also see this whole debacle being wheeled out by the BBC in years to come whenever they're accused of treading on the toes of the commercial sector. It was always going to be a win/win for them.

  • freddd freddd

    5 Jul 2010, 11:45AM

    Great news for sure. Jarvis Cocker's Sunday Service might nearly be the best radio I've heard, if not for Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour. Both brought to me by 6Music

  • mike65ie mike65ie

    5 Jul 2010, 11:47AM

    Hah! the cunning plan, a plan so cunning Mrs Fox would have doubted its chances of success appears to have done the trick.

    Announce a much loved but slightly under-performing station is to get the chop and see the fanbase and the music industry rise up as one to save it. The Guardian has of course played a leading role in this. Well done to you all.

  • AndyStiff AndyStiff

    5 Jul 2010, 11:48AM

    What a clever marketing ploy! We always knew it was never actually going to be shut. It was just a ploy to boost ratings.

    I think GMG tried to do that with The Observer...

  • syrtis syrtis

    5 Jul 2010, 11:48AM

    Again, Mark Thompson's judgment must be held to account - in common with the previous Government, he seems to think picking a random unpopular policy and then sticking to it in the face of opinion and logic shows some sort of managerial machismo, rather than - heavens! - doing what the people he was put there to serve actually want.

  • covsky covsky

    5 Jul 2010, 11:48AM

    Great news, also like the fact when I turned 6 music on a Sat morning for the first time in a while and Adam and Joe weren't being annoying.

    They are cutting the annoying presenters and going back to good DJs.

  • davros davros

    5 Jul 2010, 11:49AM

    Poor Asian network, but hooray for Radio6 . White middle class 30somethings like me are very happy.
    Maybe get rid of Radio 7 instead. Does anyone actually ever listen to it?

  • fishyphil fishyphil

    5 Jul 2010, 11:50AM

    The trust also said 6 Music does not represent a threat to commercial competitors. "Throughout the period of our consultation we have received no evidence from the commercial radio sector to suggest that 6 Music represents any kind of threat either now or in the future, so long as it remains true to its distinctive remit."

    This depresses me. Just as ITV should be showing that commercial TV can better public service broadcasting, so should Heart, Magic et al be trying to prove that local and commercial is better. Instead they'll stick to churning out any old nonsense (from a call centre halfway across the world if they can get away with it) because it's cheap and easy.

  • mapsadaisical mapsadaisical

    5 Jul 2010, 11:51AM

    Hooray! Where else would I get my daily diet of britpop and tedious indie rock? The station's slogan promises " the cutting edge music of today, the iconic and groundbreaking music of the past 40 years". And yet it saw that as being compatible with having George Lamb as a DJ. Hopeless. Now 6 Music has been saved, it needs to be changed.

  • mike65ie mike65ie

    5 Jul 2010, 11:51AM

    davros

    5 Jul 2010, 11:49AM

    Poor Asian network, but hooray for Radio6 . White middle class 30somethings like me are very happy.
    Maybe get rid of Radio 7 instead. Does anyone actually ever listen to it?

    YES, a living radio archive, it would be nuts to take 7 off the air.

  • toxtethogrady toxtethogrady

    5 Jul 2010, 11:52AM

    Good news.... but I suspect that there'll be another plan to get rid of it in a few years, they won't leave it alone.

    I can start listening to it more now, I didn't want to get too into it in case it suddenly disappeared

  • Anonimouse Anonimouse

    5 Jul 2010, 11:52AM

    Great start to the week. 6 Music is the sort of station that makes DAB worthwhile. If they start cutting back on the choice, the diversity argument for change is dead in the water. Made filling out that tedious on-line questionnaire worthwhile.

  • sjholland87 sjholland87

    5 Jul 2010, 11:52AM

    Yet more confirmation the license fee is a waste of my money.

    Try sticking to your guns BBC rather than bowing down to the pressure of elitist music snobs.

    What a stupid comment!

    6music gave listeners an alternative to the usual crap that's peddled on other BBC stations. Why should I listen to Chris Moyles in the morning?

  • StopTommard StopTommard

    5 Jul 2010, 11:55AM

    This comment has been removed by a moderator. Replies may also be deleted.
  • MillAndMe MillAndMe

    5 Jul 2010, 11:57AM

    Feels great to have helped save 6 Music but have a thought for those at Asian Network and those who will lose their job from a reduction in the BBC's online provision.

  • Carefree Carefree

    5 Jul 2010, 11:57AM

    It's wonderful wonderful news but we will be waiting and watching closely to make sure there is no kind of silly 2 Extra fudge. Can't wait to be home tonight with 6 on good & loud, dancing round the kitchen.

    Some very nice people worked very hard for all this, and lots of people donated money to help...you're all stars. Long Live 6 and come back soon, Adam & Joe!

  • curi0us0range curi0us0range

    5 Jul 2010, 11:58AM

    YES! I can now rest assured my wellbeing levels will remain untouched by the beeb's officious strateg-o-bots as I can continue to 'do' Stuart Maconie's Freak Zone on iPlayer every Monday. There's no other way to start the working week!

    Now, i'm gon' get my freak on... And every week hereafter! Amen.

  • ScaredofTories ScaredofTories

    5 Jul 2010, 11:59AM

    @poshtim

    elitist music snobs?

    I prefer - listeners who value a particular stations unique commercial free output that costs very little to produce making a stand against an ill thought out strategy by a corporation in anticipation of a Murdoch backed Tory govt?

  • MsCrow MsCrow

    5 Jul 2010, 12:00PM

    Well, lets hope the BBC recognise it's the music which garners 6 Music an audience and not the raft of celebrity presenters. Giving them the oust, employing new and unknown talent probably would have saved enough in the budget to keep Asian Network...or at least a rethought version of it. Now, when are we going to see a review of the BBC's digital/DAB services....oh? Soon? Excellent.

  • cellardoor cellardoor

    5 Jul 2010, 12:00PM

    First really pleased to see six music staying a great station that is top percentile in terms of broadcasting quality in any media.

    I don't get the conspiracy thoeries and angst against the BBC for nominating the station for closure in the first place. They outlined some options and went through a consultation process to gather user and industry opinion and have made a decision based on the results. This is hardly balack ops or poor management its just public sector service planning.

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