I’ve decided to leave radio. For now. I’ll never say forever because it was too much fun, and I will do it again.
I started out nearly 13 years ago when I went to the shop to get some milk, boring I know. But I remember it because it was like a life changing moment, they say. I saw a poster promoting a community project which was going to set up a local community radio station. Anyone could be a part of it. Seemed too good to be true. It wasn’t. I’ve still got tapes from a very young me trying to be a big radio presenter. I sounded terrible. I met some great people at that project, friends I’ve got for life.
Fast forward a few years and I took part in a group of community radio stations. It was fun, and sad when you had to turn off at the end of 28 days.
In 2006 I joined the board of CBIT, we were applying for a full time radio station licence. Everyone had their dreams, how it should go, how it should sound. We were successful and in June 2007 the 50th community radio station in the country started – NE1fm 102.5. Advice: The worst part about it was everyone had great ideas, and that created conflict. Find compromise. Get rid of people who cannot compromise. A famous exclamation I once heard was “I cannot be seen to be part of a project which does not use my software!”
NE1fm plays on the NE1. The postcode of Newcastle, and the fact anyone can take part. Some think it meant North East 1. It was a clever name. We set up before NE1 Ltd. Those people in blue coats in town. People thought they were our street teams. And I think they borrowed our “NE1 for.” advertising stuff.
In 2008 I became Chairman of the Board of CBIT. And until midnight June 8th 2013 that has been my role. It’s been hard, fun, challenging, rewarding and smashing. I didn’t think in 1999 I’d ever get to do what I’ve done.
Some achievements (some of these individual, some achieved as part of a group) include.
- I’ve broadcast from Exhibition Park in a mammoth launch weekend.
- I’ve broadcast from Tesco North Shields’ carpark when my Astra broke down.
- I’ve broadcast from a caravan.
- I’ve presented Kev & Nixxi for 198 shows!
- I’ve broadcast from Blackpool
- I’ve worked through the night fixing stuff when no-one else has been around.
- I’ve trained a blind person to help them broadcast independently.
- I’ve broken the rules.
- I’ve ploughed hundreds of pounds of my own money into the project over the years in little things that add up.
- I’ve seen ghosts in our studios!
- I’ve chosen the project over family when I shouldn’t have.
- I’ve had the same pair of DT100 headphones throughout those 13 years.
- I’ve breathed in far too much crap building studios in dusty cellars.
- I’ve stood up against people who think they could bully others.
- I’ve broadcast from home. Always cool.
- I’ve been firm but fair when dealing with problems. Always.
- I’ve never judged anyone. Because I was judged.
- I’ve remained loyal and trustworthy.
- I’ve gained the respect of hundreds of people.
The above are what people who work in a team running community projects do. They are unsung heros. And they should be praised. They do everything others don’t want to. They put stuff first when they shouldn’t.
And I’ve worked with some great people. Hev Johnson, Elaine Parker, Dave Tansley, Rob Pears, Dave Hedley, Kyle Scott, Rob Davies. All hard working people.
I’m proud to have been able to bring Tony Horne and the Three Legends to NE1fm too!
My replacement has a tough job. The current financial state of the country is depressing. The Big Society was the flagship policy idea of the 2010 UK Conservative Party general election manifesto, they wanted to see many many more people volunteering. Their stated aim was to create a climate that empowered local people and communities. Instead from my perspective they ruined most projects by cutting the funding lifelines they relied upon entirely. And imposing draconian rules on others like community radio stations who often struggle.
What will I do in my spare time now? I’ve recently dug out my old Lego…
Honoured to be mentioned amongst the best people you have worked with. As others have said on the group you’ll be a great miss, but your a good friend who hopefully now I’ll see more of
I’m Honoured to have a mention in this, Kev you are one cool guy I have ever met! Thank you to get me where I am today. Plus you have improved my music taste
Kev, As my radio career comes to an end, I was honoured to meet someone who reminded me still, after 25 years, why I had got into radio. I’ve been made what many would consider huge amounts of money and done 7 OBs from New York to the Maldives, but I’ve hardly enjoyed any of it.
I’ve loved doing NE1FM and I’ve had better chats with you than most people in the industry, and only you and I know the full extent of those chats. I would dearly love to continue at NE1FM, indeed I know I could run it and make it commercially viable but two things on that:
1 making things commercially viable makes people unhappy because you have to quash the crazy
2 I am at a different stage of my life now which I will explain around 8-11 June so it’s just nowhere near my radar.
You have done great things there just keeping it afloat. People do not know how hard it is just to stay afloat…let alone add quality.
So, bravo.
Here’e the one piece of advice I would give the armchair critics…every time you have rung Kev and think your call is all that counts…remember he has had ten such calls that day.
Thank you for coming into my life …and in time let’s reveal some of those secret chats!
T