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Pirate Radio Culture, England, Street Fashion Culture, USA, 2002
The Pirate Radio scene in London, England is still booming. If you live there you don't need me to tell you. Apparently, the numbers have more than increased from 10 years ago. More than 80 illegal stations now operate (unofficially) from the capital. Thats 25 more then 10 years ago - playing the latest Techno, Trance, Jungle, Garage (Usa and UK). This is happening even though BBC Radio One(England has now got up and running a 24 Hour Digital Dance music station...)
Some Pirate radio stations state that they can earn more then £3,000(* English Pounds) a week on advertising alone! As dance and street culture here is viewed as being one of the most important in the world. Pirates are seen in some cases as breaking or making a pop single!!
![]() Yet despite constant raids by the Radiocommunications Agency(London, England), the government body that polices the airwaves, the pirates appear to be winning the battle. According to the organisation via its most recent figures state that its offices have made over 1,494 raids against illegal radio stations in the year of 2000, around 1,300 of these in London. If caught, pirate broadcasters face up to two years in jail and unlimited fines. Yet despite all of this, the DTI have only secured 40 convitions. Coupled to this when the broadcasters are bought to book, they face usually a light fine. Many of these Pirate radio stations charge a quite low fee to entice small to large business on the airwaves. The usually charge being between £50.00 to £125.00p (English pounds). Remarkably, last summer the Metropolitan Police(London) planned to advertise Operation Trident, its anti-gun campaign, on north London pirates - until Scotland Yard lawyers pointed out that this was illegal under the 1949 Wireless Telegraphy Act.
![]() Some stations have become hugely influential in defining the nation's musical tastes. Radio Caroline in the 1960s paved the way for Radio 1. Now the London urban pirates are turning Garage and Dance music into commercial hits. From the year of 2001 a number-one singles from DJ Pied Piper, Daniel Bedingfield and So Solid Crew were boosted by early pirate airplay. Record labels are specialising in sourcing talent from the London FM pirates these days. For most pirates, advertising profits compensate for the cost of transmitters regularly seized by the DTI. These costs range from £350, including a "microlink" that allows a studio to be some distance from the tower block where the transmitter is sited. But money is not the only force driving the pirate boom. Some owners refuse adverts, lest they compromise their stations' calls for political agitation or "black empowerment". However, not all are happy with this rommance that everyone has of Pirate Radio stations here in England. "It's absolute bilge about pirates being needed by the community," said Paul Brown, chief executive of the Commercial Radio Companies' Association, the commercial stations' trade body. "These crooks broadcast at enormous power and obliterate legal radio stations." Some are now so concerned at the growing competition from pirates that they fear for their own survival. Thames Radio, broadcasting legally from Kingston upon Thames, claims that pirate interference to its 107.8FM frequency is limiting its transmission area, and losing listeners and advertising revenue.
"We're the victims," said Mark Walker, the programme controller. "I rise and fall on my audience figures, and these stations come along and stop us reaching our listeners. We have to pay licence fees, wages, performingrights fees, taxes - while these guys just squat our frequency. If this carries on, people here are going to lose their jobs." Barry Maxwell, director of the Radiocommunications Agency, agrees that the courts could be tougher.
"It would be nice to see some higher fines. There's a fairly villainous element behind (some of the) bigger stations." But the agency faces a dilemma: "You can spend a very small time taking away lots of their transmitters. Or you can spend a lot of time looking for a studio or going for a prosecution. It's a question of balancing resources." Another pointer to take into consideration for silencing Pirate Radio stations is that they can cause radio interference. Usually these complaints relate to no more than disruption to television reception. However on occasion, the agency is called out onto take the matter more seriously. A team from the Evening Standard newspaper earlier this year went on patrol with the agency's north-west London enforcement team, the agency received an emergency l"safety of life" call. Flight crews coming in to Heathrow had found one of their communications channels blocked by "Arabic music", which drowned out instructions from air-traffic control. Investigators traced the signal to a poorly constructed transmitter above Wembley Central station.
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"We found the transmitter within an hour and called police for backup," one of the enforcement officers told us. "Unfortunately the police were busy dealing with two dead bodies, so we had to wait four hours for their assistance." Two days later, when the Standard returned to Wembley Central, a replacement transmitter was already in place. London's underground pirates by David Rowan, (Evening Standard, 3rd, January, 2002) - www.thisislondon.co.uk The determination of these pirates on not getting caught is amazing.They have been stories and sightings of Pirates stations using methods as:
London's underground pirates by David Rowan, (Evening Standard, 3rd, January, 2002) - www.thisislondon.co.uk Many of Englands more ambitious Pirate radio set-ups are looking to built on a feature that has long been the norm in the United States of America marketing scene. Where "urban" marketing agencies lock happily into advertisers' knowledge that certain key groups - gay men, clubbers and black and Asian kids - have a disproportionate effect on the mainstream consumer. In the US, the African-American audience tends to lead the white consumer around by the nose. In her book called "No Logo", by Naomi Klein. She highlights the use of so-called "Brands" by sports brands such as Nike and Adidas and soft drink companies such as Coke and Pepsi, who hand cash to the "coolest kids in the school" to wander round the playground discoursing on the benefits of one drink or shoe over another. Excerpts from - "No logo - Taking aim at the Brand Bullies" by Naomi Klein. (The book examines the negative effects that '90s marketing has had on culture, work and the consumer voice; copyright ©1999 by Naomi Klein Reprinted by permission of St. Martin's Press, LLC) Please read below...
"As we have seen, in the eighties you had to be relatively rich to get noticed by marketers. In the nineties, you have only to be cool. As designer Christian Lacroix remarked in Vogue, "it's terrible to say, very often the most exciting outfits are from the poorest people."
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Since "My Adidas," nothing in inner-city branding has been left up to chance. Major record labels like BMG now hire "street crews" of urban black youth to talk up hip-hop albums in their communities and to go out on guerrilla-style postering and sticker missions. The L.A.-based Steven Rifkind Company bills itself as a marketing firm "specializing in building word-of-mouth in urban areas and inner cities." Rifkind is CEO of the rap label Loud Records, and companies like Nike pay him hundreds of thousands of dollars to find out how to make their brands cool with trend-setting black youth.
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Tommy Hilfiger, even more than Nike or Adidas, has fumed the harnessing of ghetto cool into a mass-marketing science. Hilfiger forged a formula that has since been imitated by Polo, Nautica, Munsingwear (thanks to Puff Daddy's fondness for the penguin logo) and several other clothing companies looking for a short cut to making it at the suburban mall with innercity attitude.
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Tommy Hilfiger started off squarely as white-preppy wear in the tradition of Ralph Lauren and Lacoste. But the designer soon realized that his clothes also had a peculiar cachet in the inner cities, where the hip-hop philosophy of "living large" saw poor and working-class kids acquiring status in the ghetto by adopting the gear and accoutrements of prohibitively costly leisure activities, such as skiing, golfing, even boating. Perhaps to better position his brand within this urban fantasy, Hilfiger began to associate his clothes more consciously with these sports, shooting ads at yacht clubs, beaches and other nautical locales. At the same time, the clothes themselves were redesigned to appeal more directly to the hip-hop aesthetic. Cultural theorist Paul Smith describes the shift as "bolder colors, bigger and baggier styles, more hoods and cords, and more prominence for logos and the Hilfiger name." He also plied rap artists like Snoop Dogg with free clothes and, walking the tightrope between the yacht and the ghetto, launched a line of Tommy Hilfiger beepers.
Once Tommy was firmly established as a ghetto thing, the real selling could begin - not just to the comparatively small market of poor inner-city youth but to the much larger market of middle-class white and Asian kids who mimic black style in everything from lingo to sports to music. Company sales reached $847 million in 1998--up from a paltry $53 million in 1991 when Hilfiger was still, as Smith puts it, "Young Republican clothing." Like so much of cool hunting, Hilfiger's marketing journey feeds off the alienation at the heart of America's race relations: selling white youth on their fetishization of black style, and black youth on their fetishization of white wealth.
![]() And you thought it was just about the music? Music and Fashion usually go in hand as this has proved over the decades. Usually it is the music the susequently changes fashions. If you have any comments any comments what so ever on any of the things mention within this report please get back to me. If you disagree entirely with this report. Please get back to me, I would love to hear your views!! Report was done by Carl Brown Ipswich, England
All rights of the text and the images belong to Carl Brown,
David Rowan and Naomi Klein.
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