Southend Hospital Radio Blog

Mar 28

Well, so much for that regular blog I promised!

Doing the sunday night selection as I write and myself and Jemma have noticed the alarming chart positions for truly great records that stalled in the lower ends of the top 20 at the time. EG Isley Brothers Summer Breeze #16! Eddie Cochran Summertime Blues #18! Beggars belief….that’s not the name of a band, it just does…

So our theme this week was songs that include the season in the title, so we’ve had diverse numbers including Fleet Foxes and Midlake, as well as the more obvious ones from the likes of Bryan Adams and Bananarama, and Terry Jacks aswell (unfortunately!)

Next week’s theme will be songs with Mr, Mrs, Ms and Miss in the title. Plenty to choose from there, any ideas?


Feb 11

The Dark Waters theatre group are supporting and raising funds for Southend Hospital Radio with their new production of Little Red Riding Hood.

This brand new show is based on everyone’s favourite fairy tale. Journey with Little Red herself as she embarks on the classic story with perhaps, not such expected characters. Meet Geoff, the Big Bad Wolf who is determined to become King of the Wood as aided by his sidekick; Steve the Sheep. Geoff has competition though from another Big Bad Wolf: Kenny; and he’ll stop at nothing to prevent Geoff from achieving his goal!

Throw in a comedy duo of woodland creatures, hilarious dialogue steeped in irony and sarcasm; and you have the farce of the year that’s fun for all the family. It’s Little Red Riding Hood how you’ve never seen it before; yet somehow, the way you’ve always wanted to see it. For Kids and Grown-Up’s alike!

The show runs from Tuesday 22nd March until Saturday 26th February in the Dixon Studio at the Palace Theatre in Westcliff-on-Sea.

Tickets priced, Full; £9.00, Child: £5.00, Senior Citizen: £7.00, Family Ticket of 4 (max 2 Adults) £19.00

For booking information please visit http://www.thecliffspavilion.co.uk/.


Nov 23

Thank you to all those who came along and supported the Chinese fundraising evening on Sunday at Zen City. We raised £422.13 which is fantastic!

Zen City 2010 tables

Zen City November 2010

A big thank you to all of the local companies that contributed very generously to our raffle prizes.

  • Zen City
  • Rossi Ice Cream
  • PhotoVisual
  • Charlie Choy’s
  • Southend Theatres
  • Spa Renaissance
  • Stella Cast Hair Design
  • Adventure Island
  • Sea Life Centre
  • Kids Kingdom
Chinese Meal Raffle Prizes

Chinese Meal November Raffle Prizes

Thanks again,

Jemma

PS: You can find a small collection of photos here: Southend Hospital Radio Chinese 2010


Oct 15

As per the title. Southend Hospital Radio will be open for business as usual from Monday after the flood of a fortnight or so ago. Programmes will continue as per the normal schedule.

Neil


Jul 26

Well for my first blog on here I think I should tell you a little bit about myself and how I became a presenter at Hospital Radio.

I was a year out of a Journalism degree at university where upon I majored in Broadcast – i.e. Radio & TV. I wanted to get into Journalism but my career hadn’t taken off as yet. I was freelancing a fair bit but nothing stable. I will admit that my main reason for joining was it would be good for my CV.

Four years later and my life and career have changed totally. I’m not in the media any more and work full-time quite happily in Search Marketing. Yet I am very much still at Hospital Radio and to be blunt it is one of my highlights of the week.

I suspect many applications for Hospital Radio are from young people like myself who think that it would be great fun to ‘play at being a DJ’ and it is just a step on the career ladder. By all means doing Hospital Radio is good for any potential media related CV but as I found out – that isn’t what Hospital Radio is about. If you think that you’ll come down and host your own show straight away then I’m sorry – that isn’t how it works.

When you join Southend Hospital Radio the first person you’ll speak to is Joan. She’ll take you through what we do. All new people start on a Request show. These run all five nights of the working week. This is when you’ll go up to the wards and take requests from patients to play on that show later in the evening.

Then you’ll help present the show with all the requests. All nights have a different team of volunteers who visit different wards. No two nights are the same as their are differing styles of presenting and a whole mix of characters. It all makes for what Hospital Radio is.

If you are interested in learning how to run a radio desk then Dave will help you learn and you will build up experience of being on air. However you get far more from it then just a nice note on your CV.

You get to meet new people and make new friends. You get to do something which genuinely helps people. When you go up to the wards to take requests you might just be the only non-staff person that patient will see all day. Many of them just want a chat and didn’t even know they should pick up free radio. You might think that it is only radio but being part of the Hospital Radio team is more than that.

So four years or so on and I’m still in the same seat every Wednesday night. The cast list may have changed (except for the very short person who has sat opposite me practically every Wednesday night I’ve been there in the past four years) but the friendship and the sense of doing something good and enjoyable has never changed.

Hospital Radio – Unlike Ronseal – It does more than it says on the tin.


Southend Hospital Radio is a registered charity in the UK. This blog allows members of the Southend Hospital Radio team to share news, information and opinion. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of Southend and District Hospital Radio. For details of what we do, please visit www.southendhospitalradio.co.uk