‘More Mr. Bean than Mr. Farage’
UNION JACK RADIO PLAYS ONLY MUSIC BY BRITISH ARTISTS. BUT DON'T CALL IT BREXIT RADIO
Union JACK Radio broadcasts out of a low-slung, graffiti-covered structure its staff affectionately refer to on the air as “the dumpy little building.”
Had it launched at any other time, Union JACK might not have attracted quite so much attention. The concept behind the station is straightforward. It plays only British music, by British artists. Its target audience is people 45 to 59 years old.
On a recent morning, the playlist included music by New Order, Queen, Radiohead, some very good punk by a band called The Members, and recorded voiceovers making quips about some of the things typically viewed as essential Britishness: “popping out for a curry,” Mini Coopers, excessive politeness. According to its promotional materials, the station aims to celebrate “the quirky British way of life ... from Mary Berry’s soggy bottom to a proper cup of tea.”
But Union JACK began broadcasting in September 2016, less than three months after the country voted to leave the European Union, following a bitter campaign that divided the U.K. These wounds have not healed. And so, Union JACK has spent the first few months of its young life pushing back — always impeccably polite — against those who’ve dubbed the station “radio Brexit.”
NME, an influential British music magazine, covered the first hour of Union JACK’s debut in an article that began, “If you liked Brexit but thought it lacked a decent soundtrack, you are in luck.” Another publication went with the headline: “Brexit Britain Radio Station Bans Foreigner(s).”
That stream of press coverage has mostly died off, but the station still fields the occasional angry tweet. In response, the social media team, which consists solely of a sunny 20-something named Phil, tweets back friendly responses that insist on the station’s staunch neutrality on all things Brexit.
“We’re letting people shake their fists at us, and we’re just sort of waving back,” said program manager Giles Gear.
“No bias/Brexit undertones here. We’re more Mr. Bean than Mr. Farage,” the station’s Twitter account recently chirped. “Nah, no bias here,” it said in another. “All about celebrating the music, comedy and quirks from this weird and wonderful island. Smashing!”
Union JACK CEO Ian Walker, 49, says the concept was conceived following the London 2012 Olympic Games.
London was hosting the Summer Olympics four years after Beijing, which had seen the occasion as a coming-out party on the world stage. In its opening ceremony, Beijing opted for spectacular performances on a gigantic scale. Now that it was Britain’s turn, the world waited anxiously to see how a country — not a rising power, but one in decline — would follow.
The U.K. opted not for grandiosity, but for quirk. The Queen parachuted out of a helicopter (or at least appeared to, with the aid of a royal stunt double) accompanied by James Bond. Paul McCartney made an appearance, as did Mary Poppins and the National Health Service, in a celebration of British cultural icons. Britain, The New York Times wrote, was presenting itself to the world as “a nation secure in its own post-empire identity” if “sometimes slightly insane.”
Walker, who is Australian but has lived in the U.K. since 2002, said he saw in the spirit of these Games an opportunity.
“When the Olympics came to London there was such a groundswell of national pride,” he said. “It was really transformational.” Britain, he said, was a country longing for a chance to celebrate and embrace its idiosyncrasies. What if a radio station could tap into that same enthusiasm?
Union JACK is still selling a version of this Britain: a weird and wacky island with certain cultural touchstones that everyone, Brexiteers and Remoaners alike, can love and share: tea, queuing, The Great British Bake Off. But it’s not yet clear that in post-Brexit Britain, where once-simple patriotism has suddenly become politically fraught, such symbols can be universally embraced the way they were five years ago.
Or maybe it is that simple, and maybe they can. Jordan Bassett, who reviewed Union JACK for NME, started out his hour of listening with his tone set firmly to snide. The first 30 seconds on the air, which included a man talking about “pork pies and pasties” (a Cornish pastry) and the TV sitcom Fawlty Towers, were like “a moodboard from the mind of Nigel Farage,” he wrote.
A few minutes later, however, the station moved onto the music — and it proved hard to resist. By minute 10, following Erasure’s A Little Respect: “I’ve removed my shirt, and I’m dancing at my desk.” Minute 36: He was swooning over Pulp’s Common People. By minute 49, it was all over. British music, after all, is very good.
“The accumulative effect of Erasure, Oasis, Pulp and The Smiths is reason to believe that maybe Union JACK is the best radio station ever invented,” he wrote. Tallyho.
WE’RE LETTING PEOPLE SHAKE THEIR FISTS AT US, AND WE’RE JUST SORT OF WAVING BACK. — GILES GEAR, UNION JACK RADIO PROGRAM MANAGER