5FM

Coordinates: 26°11′09″S 28°00′34″E / 26.1859°S 28.0094°E / -26.1859; 28.0094
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5FM
Broadcast areaSouth Africa Broadcast Nationwide (via, repeaters)
FrequencyVarious Nationwide, 98.0 FM in Johannesburg
Programming
FormatCHR (Contemporary hit radio)
Ownership
OwnerSABC
History
First air date
13 October 1975 (1975-10-13)
Links
WebcastListen live
Websitewww.5fm.co.za

5FM is a South African FM radio station forming part of the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), South Africa's public broadcaster. 5FM follows a Top 40 music format aimed at a youth market, together with news and sports coverage.

Originally named Radio 5, the station was re-branded as "5FM" in 1992, and has as its current logo a red "5" and superscripted "FM" within a circle and the words "The Power of" inscribed along the upper periphery of the circle.

The station is currently managed by JD Mostert who is the Business Manager of 5FM as well as Good Hope FM.

Origin and history[edit]

Formerly known as "Radio 5", the station developed from a commercial station, LM Radio, which had been broadcasting to a South African youth audience from Lourenço Marques (now Maputo) in neighbouring Mozambique.[1] When LM Radio was shut down by the incoming Frelimo government after Mozambique gained its independence, the South African government instructed the SABC to take over the staff and the service.[citation needed] The station was renamed Radio 5, and former LM Radio presenter Nick Megans presented the first live show starting at 05:00 on 13 October 1975[2] from SABC Broadcast House in Commissioner Street. Radio 5 broadcast in the medium wave band from transmitters at Welgedacht, Maraisburg, Pietersburg, Durban, Bloemfontein, Brackenfell, Port Elizabeth and Grahamstown. Broadcasting was later moved to the basement of the Broadcast Centre, Auckland Park in Johannesburg.

The name Radio 5 indicated that it was the SABC's fifth national radio channel at that time, after Radio Suid-Afrika, Radio South Africa, Springbok Radio and Radio Bantu.

Initially the government-controlled SABC required Radio 5 to be bilingual with an equal weighting of English and Afrikaans. Music content was strictly controlled and censored. Radio 5 competed with the independent Channel 702 (later renamed to Radio 702) broadcasting from Bophuthatswana and Capital 604 from the Transkei. Radio 702 changed its music format to a Top 40 format, on the advice of an American consultant, Bob Hennaberry, and head hunted the former Radio LM presenter John Berks from Radio 5. Within a year 702 claimed nearly a million listeners from the PWV area (now Gauteng) while the nationwide Radio 5 had less than 150,000.

Malcolm Russell, a former Rhodesian TV and radio host, who hosted host the new Radio 5 Breakfast Show, was appointed Programme Director and initiated a mandate to improve the station, with the support of Riaan Eksteen who became Director General of the SABC in 1984. English became the primary broadcast language and commercial scheduling was overhauled to be less intrusive. Presenters were re-engaged on an annual freelance contract with shows named for and designed by them.

New evening shows were launched to compete with television one of them being Chris Prior - the "Rock Professor". FM stereo was introduced nationally, and broadcasts extended to 24/7. The Chuckle and Chat, a live phone-in show interspersed with music, was introduced as the first talk show on a South African music station, presented by David Blood and Tony Sanderson. It became the most popular programme with listenership peaking at around 1 million nightly.

Russell made the presenters responsible for their own success or failure with the promise that, when their year's contract expired, they would be free to renegotiate based on the audience the shows delivered. However, Russell remained on salary and sought to negotiate the same performance-based contract for himself. Senior management rejected the proposal and Russell resigned to begin his own company, the Broadcast Development Group, and was later contracted to assist Radio 702 with its repositioning and transition to 702 Talk Radio.

Former Presenters[edit]

  • Mark Gillman
  • Alex Jay
  • Kevin Savage
  • Brian Oxley
  • Martin Bailey
  • Rafe Lavine
  • Tony Blewitt
  • Tich Mataz
  • Ian F (Also Hosted the 5fm Top 40 with Sasha Martinengo)
  • Darren Scott (Drive time with John Walland, Ray White and Leigh-Ann Mol (née Van der Stadt))
  • Mark Pilgrim with Ray White (Weekend Breakfast Show)
  • Cleone Cassidy
  • Ursula Stapelfeldt (Host of the World Chart Show)
  • Sami Sabiti (Host of the World Chart Show)
  • Koula (Host of the World Chart Show)
  • Nicole Fox
  • Zuraida Jardine
  • Gareth Cliff
  • Derek the Bandit
  • Keith Lindsay
  • Barney Simon[3]
  • Phil Wright
  • Christina Knight (Knight School The Really Early Morning Show on Weekends)
  • Roger Goode
  • Thando Thabethe
  • Ms Cosmo
  • DJ Fresh

5FM On-Air Shows[edit]

Breakfast Shows[edit]

The Mark Gillman show was hosted by Mark Gillman and supported by Kevin Fine and Ruben Goldberg, Catherine Strydom (Grenfell) and stuntman "DangerBoy".[4] Gillman was known for his loud personality and his slogan "I Love it in the Mornings".

After a brief stint as the host of the drive-time show, Gareth Cliff replaced Gillman as 5fm's Breakfast Show host. With Cliff as the host, the show was supported by Leigh-Ann Mol on News, Mabale Moloi on traffic & Sias DuPlessis on Sport, with the production team featuring Damon Kalvari (Assistant to the Producer), and Thabo Modisane (Executive Producer). The show ended in 2014 when Cliff began an online radio platform, to which all of his team, save DuPlessis & Modisane, followed him.[5]

Following Cliff's departure in 2014, DJ Fresh took over the morning show, having hosted the drive-time show since 2003. He was joined by Carmen Reddy on News, Duran Collett on Sports News, Sol Phenduka (and later Nonala Tose) on Traffic. On 31 March 2017, Fresh left 5FM for sister station, Metro FM.

He was replaced by Roger Goode, who hosted the show alongside Robbie Kruse on Sports, Sureshnie Rieder on News and Zanele Potelwa (nicknamed 'Young Boomerang') on traffic.

As of May 2021, former Good Hope FM host Dan Corder took over the Breakfast Show, joined by Thabo Baloyi on News, Xoli Zondo on Sports and Marli van Eeden on Traffic.

Weekday Mid-Morning Shows[edit]

5FM weekday mid-morning presenters include Rob Vember, Poppy Ntshongwana and prior to their Drive Shows, Thando Thabethe & Nick Hamman.

In May 2020, Msizi James and Stephanie Be paired up to present the Mid Mornings on 5 show during the brunchtime slot. Upon James’ departure for Johannesburg-based rival station 947, Stephanie hosts the brunchtime show alone.

Rob Forbes and Fix Moeti host the Forbes&Fix show during the lunchtime slot, with Kim Schulze on news. In 2021, they left radio, and the lunchtime show was taken over by Zanele Potelwa, with Yanga Mjoli on News.

Drive Time Shows[edit]

Until 2014, DJ Fresh hosted "The Fresh Drive" alongside Catherine Grenfell, Poppy Ntshongwana, Duran Collett & Carmen Reddy. They were replaced by Roger Goode, Ms Cosmo, Sureshnie Rieder and Sias du Plessis, who was later replaced by Robbie Kruse.

In 2017, Thando Thabethe became the station's first woman to host the Drive Time show. "The Thabooty Drive" featured Durbanite Msizi James as the co-host, Sibaphiwe Matiyela (and later, Nadia Romanos) on News and Duran Collett on Sports.

In May 2020, Nick Hamman, who had previously hosted the Hamman Time show during the mid-morning slot, took over as the host of 5Drive with producer Mad Money Mike, Nadia Romanos on news, Yonaka Theledi on traffic and Jude van Wyk on sports.[6]

Weekday Evening & Night Programming[edit]

The evening show, 5Nights is hosted by Karabo Ntshweng from 19:00 - 22:00 Monday to Thursday. This is a fresh show with genre-specific charts each day highlighting the best local indie, pop, hip hop and dance songs.

The late-night show, 5 After Hours is hosted by Leah Jazz, which offers risqué-themed content every night.

Weekend Breakfast Shows[edit]

Before 2019, the Weekend Breakfast show, A Cuppa JT was hosted by Justin Toerien, with Nadia Romanos & Jude van Wyk on News & Sports respectively.

In April 2019, Nicole da Silva took over the reins of the weekend morning slot, naming the show 5FM Xtra Loud Mornings. She is joined by Sibaphiwe Matiyela on News and Duran Collett on Sports.

As of May 2022 KwaZulu-Natal born Minnie Ntuli from East Coast Radio joined the national youth radio station to anchor with Monique De Villiers on News and Aaron Masemola on Sports. A 2023-line up change saw Retshepile Seakamela take over the reins of 5Weekend Breakfast, retaining Aaron Masemola on the sports desk and introducing Palesa Lemeke as a Newsreader.

Weekend Shows[edit]

Weekend music shows are hosted by the 5FM 'Weekender5', a collective of specialist music show hosts including Kid Fonque, Das kapital and Kyle Cassim among others.

Nick Archibald anchors the 5FM Top 40 Chart show every Saturday and the 5FM Request Takeover show on Sundays.

The rest of the weekend show offering is made up of the afternoon slot, anchored by Boipelo Mooketsi, who hosts the show alongside newsreader & fellow VoW (Voice of Wits) alumna Nomama Dlamini, while the weekend night offering is covered by Harrison Mkhize.[7]

Early Morning Programming[edit]

Until 2021, 5FM had round-the-clock broadcasting. The station is now automated with music between 01:00 and 04:00 daily. The only early morning programming exists with the station's Early Breakfast shows, hosted by Monique de Villiers between Monday and Friday between 04:00 and 06:00, and with the weekend shows, 5Weekend Early Mornings done by former Tuks FM presenters Tshepang Moji on Saturdays and Jodell Tantij Sundays between 04:00 and 07:00.

Listenership figures[edit]

Estimated Listenership[8]
7 Day
Nov 2015 1 745 000
Sep 2015 1 706 000
Jun 2015 1 724 000
Feb 2015 1 707 000
Dec 2014 1 749 000
Oct 2014 1 904 000
Aug 2014 1 962 000
Jun 2014 1 878 000
May 2014 1 925 000
Feb 2014 2 021 000
Dec 2013 2 131 000
Nov 2013 2 064 000
Aug 2013 2 068 000
Jun 2013 2 127 000
May 2013 2 089 000
Feb 2013 2 025 000
Dec 2012 2 146 000
Oct 2012 2 176 000
Aug 2012 2 189 000
Jun 2012 2 246 000

References[edit]

  1. ^ "LM Radio History". Archived from the original on 4 August 2015. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  2. ^ "Development of Broadcasting in SA". SABC. Archived from the original on 25 December 2013. Retrieved 25 March 2014.
  3. ^ "Giving rock a hard place". IOL. 28 November 2002.
  4. ^ "DJ's 'patrol' hits Durban - IOL Entertainment".
  5. ^ "Gareth Cliff". South Africa: SABC. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  6. ^ "5FM has announced its brand new 2020 line-up". News24. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  7. ^ "5 Weekend Nights". www.5fm.co.za.
  8. ^ SAARF RAMS (Reports)

External links[edit]

26°11′09″S 28°00′34″E / 26.1859°S 28.0094°E / -26.1859; 28.0094