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Thread: Your call?

  1. #1
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    Post Your call?

    Leaving aside any discussion about the merits of Your Call on Breakfast, I'm starting to wonder who 'you' are. I haven't heard a female caller for over two weeks, except for a little girl pre-recorded and transmitted to mark Children in Need. And many of the callers are recalling childhood memories from the 50s or earlier. I've enjoyed some of these, as I too was a child in the 50s, but I'm curious about the reasons for this 'vast similitude' in the characteristics of callers. Are they representative of the people who write in? Are these the people who have requested pieces that meet the playlist criteria? Are they chosen to reflect the demographic of the listeners? If the BBC is looking to attract a new audience, might they consider interviewing a more varied selection of callers ... or even replacing Your Call with roving microphone interviews with people attending open-air concerts, music college students, children's choirs and orchestra, community choirs etc and others from all the 'walks of life' along which the new target audience might be ambling amongst 'cool gales'?

    Forgive me if I'm repeating points you've already discusses, but I' new to this forum. Thanks for reading, anyway.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by petalmoore View Post
    Forgive me if I'm repeating points you've already discusses, but I' new to this forum. Thanks for reading, anyway.
    Hello, petalmoore - and welcome.

    Well ......... Your Call has been discussed here, it's true, though not quite with your interest in research .

    I suspect that the assumption is that people will get used to it if the opposite (Not Your Call) isn't available.

    In general though, I've often wondered who the listeners are that the BBC consults, how they get hold of them &c. They don't seem very typical of any of the listeners I know ...

  3. #3
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    I had assumed that to get on Your Call you simply emailed and if your story was half-interesting, then you got picked. I hadn't considered if the caller's choice of music fitted into the R3 playlist remit. Petalmoore mentions lack of female callers, this is possibly that the R3 audience is overwhelmingly male?

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anna View Post
    ... this is possibly that the R3 audience is overwhelmingly male?
    ... now that's interesting. Does French Frank or anyone else have stats as to who listens to radio 3 - male/female; age; ethnic affiliation; social class???

  5. #5
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    I googled 'Demographic of Radio 3 audience' and ended up on www.adambowie.com. From what I can gather, the normal split is roughly 55% men to 45% women.

  6. #6
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    Well, I'm sure frenchie has the facts and figures but I think I am right in saying (or it used to be said) the average R3 listener is white, male, lives in the Home Counties, and is over the age of 63

  7. #7
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    Well, things change a little over the years. Adam Bowie's figures are the ones I've used in the past but are a bit out of date. I don't think they would have changed dramatically since 2004/04.

    So, yes, male/female probably about 55%/45% - nowhere near as male oriented as R5L where the split - E&OE - is about 70%/30%.

    Average age was about 59%, though RW said on Thursday that it was 'about the same as Radio 4's - you know, um, about 56'. I suspect there was a bit of exaggeration there in order to claim that R3 and R4 were of roughly the same average age. The last official figure I was given was that R3 was average 59 and it would take a pretty seismic shift to get it down to 56. Radio 4's is currently 55, R2's nearer 50.

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by Anna View Post
    Well, I'm sure frenchie has the facts and figures but I think I am right in saying (or it used to be said) the average R3 listener is white, male, lives in the Home Counties, and is over the age of 63
    I can claim three of the requirements - and I'll achieve the fourth next year!

    Shame that I am finding R3 less and less appealing.

  9. #9
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    Well I only fit the white male requirements, I've got 16 years to go yet and E Anglia doesn't count as the home counties. I hope this doesn't mean that in 16 years I'll be tuning into Breakfast daily and will be an interactive listener!

  10. #10
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    It fits me a T.

    But then I hardly listen to R3 any more either.
    O Wort, du Wort, das mir Fehlt!

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