About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: 2000 radio programme debuts, Radio stations established in 2000, Dead Ringers, Fox Sports Radio, Absolute Power, Revolting People, KXLB, WUIN, 1CMS, Absolute Classic Rock, WKQL, DXMX, KNCU, Ectoplasm, WKZA, WIRE, WJCF-FM, KPOI-FM, Acropolis Now, 1WAY, KFLG-FM, KMTK, Scandinavian Weekend Radio, ArtSound FM, 2000 in British radio, Passion Radio, WBMH, Smelling of Roses, ALL FM, Hot 92, Newbury Sound, The Storm, KSWI, DXQR, KAYW, DYSA, DXQS, Radio Bemerton, WMSD, DYTC, Power Hit Radio, DXNS, Big Time Balita, NRK Stortinget, DWDA, Radio Lumbini, The Change, Central 822, The Big Booth, Comedians' Comedians, Cabaret on 4, Arrested Development. Excerpt: Dead Ringers is a UK radio and television comedy impressions broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and later BBC Two. The programme was devised by producer Bill Dare and developed with Jon Holmes, Andy Hurst and Simon Blackwell. It starred Jon Culshaw, Jan Ravens, Phil Cornwell, Kevin Connelly and Mark Perry. The main writers for season 1-3 on Radio were Jon Holmes and Andy Hurst with Tom Jamieson and Nev Fountain coming on board in Series 4. Other writers have included Simon Blackwell, Jon Culshaw, Jan Ravens, John Finnemore, David Mitchell, Richard Ward, Terry Newman, Jonathan Morris, Colin Birch, Carl Carter and Tony Cooke. It was revealed by star Jan Ravens that the BBC quietly cancelled the television run in 2007 after five years of broadcast. The programme aired in 2000. The cast of the first series was different from other instalments. Of the established team, only Culshaw and Ravens appeared, as did Kate Robbins, Simon Lipson and Alistair McGowan. On the radio, there have been ten series plus a number of specials, including one devoted to the BBC radio soap The Archers and one to Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee. The television incarnation aired its fifth series in 2005, incl...