Anglo-Polish Radio

ORLA.fm logo since 2015
ORLA.fm logo since 2009

Anglo-Polish Radio (also known as Radio ORLA and ORLA.fm) is the only bi-lingual radio station for Polish and English-speaking audiences in the United Kingdom and Ireland. The station also broadcasts to listeners in Poland. It is based in London. Bi-lingual journalist George Matlock is Radio ORLA's founder.[1] Since May 18, 2015, the station is exclusively a podcaster (a broadcaster of on-demand content in English and Polish languages).

ORLA.fm launched on 18 May 2006 after the British Broadcasting Corporation's decision to close many European language radio services in December of the previous year.

ORLA.fm is a community-based radio station which also accepts advertising and covers major Polish community events and champions the "little person" too. Its advertisers have included the UK's National Health Service, RyanAir, Wal-Mart's ASDA, Jet One and Wirtualna Polska.

The launch date was chosen because the station wanted to demonstrate a positive and landmark event in Poland's history. 18 May is the birthdate of the Polish Pope John Paul II, arguably the most famous Pole internationally.

The radio station aired more English music than Polish, largely based on what its listeners have said they wanted to hear. Often Polish audiences could hear English music on the playlist which had yet to appear in Poland! Uniquely, the station adopted a music rotation system airing music from the last 50 years. So in January it was January 1960, January 1975 and so on. In February, the playlist was from the past 50 years of chart music in February. But Radio ORLA.fm also broadcast more chill-out and alternative music.[2]

In 2014, a strategic review of the station by its founder concluded that listeners were mostly drawn to the station by its unique content, such as interviews and news reports, and that there was a saturation of music radio stations competing with on-demand music vendors such as Spotify and other content providers such as YouTube. The decision was taken to relaunch as an on-demand content provider, dropping music and the live stream.

ORLA.fm London routemaster bus since 2010. It can be hired by advertisers

Radio ORLA.fm has been a partner of Hayes FM 91.8 in west London since September 2007, when Hayes launched, and provided Hayes with the weekly English-language cultural show "London Bridge" hosted by presenter George Matlock and "Fine" Art Skupienski. A recent addition has been Briton Kingsley who offers his take on Poles. London Bridge ceased to broadcast in 2014 although podcasts of many of the shows are in the process of being rolled out on the station's on-demand platform.

The station's first studio was in Haven Green, right next to Ealing Broadway rail station and housed in the same building as the publication "Polski Goniec", with whom the station had a short-lived collaboration before the magazine launched an ill-fated online and FM radio station.

Among milestones...


Since January 2010, Radio ORLA.fm moved to a studio at Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College, where it trained media students aged 16–18 years in radio reporting and production work.[3]

Early logo of ORLA.fm from 2007

But it was never all just about music. The station has interviewed Polish Presidents (Kwasniewski, Kaczynski, Komorowski) as well as the last Polish president-in-exile, the late Ryszard Kaczorowski, and an interview with Lech Wałęsa failed because of technical problems on a live broadcast outside London. The station has also interviewed sports and music personalities, actors, producers, club DJs, and even co-produced a 4-part bi-lingual biography of Prince Michal Kleofas Oginski, reportedly the composer of the Polish national anthem. The narrator was a direct descendent of Oginski, Iwo Zaluski.

Other cultural events have included a radio play about Frederik Chopin on his last tour, a visit to Britain, with musical performances by Peter Katin and others on the very same two pianos which Chopin performed on in the UK.

In January 2012, ORLA.fm launched an iPhone APP and in October 2013 an Android APP so that listeners can tune in and do other things while on-the-go on their smartphones or tablets.

In October 2013, ORLA.fm launched a marketing and content alliance with London-based Polish quality newspaper Nowy Czas.

Since the 2014 strategic review, ORLA.fm has focused on on-demand podcasts and its website is HTML5-compliant, ensuring content can be easily streamed or downloaded from any browser on devices like smartphones and tablets. However, an APP for Android is likely to be developed in 2016 to allow listeners to organise their on-demand content.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.