5FM


5FM is a South African FM radio station that follows a Top 40 music format and is owned by the South African Broadcasting Corporation, South Africa's public broadcaster. The current station manager is JD Mostert, with Siyanda Fikelephi as the Programme Manager.

Origin and history

Formerly known as "Radio 5", the station developed from a commercial station, LM Radio, which had been operating from Lourenço Marques in neighbouring Mozambique. Radio 5 first went on the air on 13 October 1975 after Mozambique gained its independence. The station began broadcasting in the medium wave band from transmitters at Welgedacht, Maraisburg, Pietersburg, Durban, Bloemfontein, Brackenfell, Port Elizabeth and Grahamstown. The name indicated it was the SABC's fifth national radio channel at that time, after Radio Suid-Afrika, Radio South Africa, Springbok Radio and Radio Bantu.
Re-branded "5FM" in 1992, it 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. Music is the heart of 5FM's format, supported by news, sports and traffic catering to a wide range of tastes for a youthful market.

The History of Radio 5/5FM From 1975 to 1987

Radio 5 launched on 13 October 1975 from the SABC Broadcast House in Commissioner Street and was later moved into the basement of the Broadcast Centre, Auckland Park in Johannesburg. It had interesting foreign origins!
LM Radio, targeting South Africa's youth from Lourenço Marques in Mozambique had for years been a thorn in the side of the Calvinistic South African Government and its National Broadcaster, the SABC. When LM Radio was shut down by the Frelimo Government the South African Government instructed the SABC to take over the staff and the service.
This was not welcomed by the SABC. They promptly renamed the station Radio 5 and required it to be bilingual with an equal weighting of English and Afrikaans. Music was strictly monitored, controlled and censored. As a commercial radio station it was doomed.
The day after LM's closure, now ex-LM jock Nick Megans reported for duty and presented the first live show on Radio 5 starting at 05:00 on 13 October 1975.
Competition was fierce. Channel 702 broadcasting from Bophuthatswana and Capital 604 in the Transkei were Radio 5's competition.  But this was not enough to change the attitude of the Calvinistic SABC..
Channel 702 was renamed Radio 702 and, on the advice of an American consultant, Bob Hennaberry, the music format changed to straight Top 40 with the introduction of new voices. The star to emerge was the highly talented John Berks who they head-hunted from Radio 5. Within a year 702 claimed nearly a million listeners from the area then called the PWV while the nationwide Radio 5 could muster less than 150,000.
Rhodesian TV and Radio man Malcolm Russell was employed as the new Radio 5 Breakfast Show Host and used the time to plan a way forward against the powerful competition Radio 5 faced. Coincidentally there was a changing of the guard at the SABC. Riaan Eksteen was appointed Director General in 1984. When he learnt that the youth of the nation were listening to 'foreign stations' he is reported to have demanded that Radio 5 be 'fixed or shut'.
In 1985 Russell presented a radical and far-reaching plan and was appointed to Programme Director to implement it. He was given a six-month window with his only constraint being 'Don't breach the Broadcast Act.'
He immediately began sweeping changes, determined to programme for the listener, not the management. This included:
The live phone-in Chuckle and Chat Show, presented by David Blood and Tony Sanderson became the hottest property on the air with listenership peaking at around 1 million nightly.
Russell made the Presenter's 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.  At the end of the first 12 months with an unheard of growth in loyal listeners, no-one lost their jobs!
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..

Presenters from the 90s up to the late 2000s

Breakfast Shows

The Mark Gillman show was hosted by Mark Gillman and supported by Kevin Fine and Ruben Goldberg, Catherine Strydom and stuntman "DangerBoy". Gillman was best known for his loud personality, and ability to wake people up with his high energy. His slogan "I Love it in the Mornings" was an effective mantra for people looking to start their days off on a positive note.
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, and Thabo Modisane. The show ended in 2014 when Cliff began an online radio platform, to which all of his team, save DuPlessis & Modisane, followed him.
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 on Traffic. On 31 March 2017, Fresh left 5FM for sister station, Metro FM.
He was replaced by the current breakfast show host, Roger Goode, who hosts the show alongside Robbie Kruse on Sports, Sureshnie Rieder on News and Zanele Potelwa on traffic.

Weekday Mid-Morning Shows

Since May 2020, Msizi James and Stephanie Be have paired up to present the Mid Mornings on 5 show during the brunchtime slot.
Rob Forbes & Fix Moeti, one of South Africa’s leading radio duos continue to host the Forbes&Fix show during the lunchtime slot, with Kim Schulze on News.

Drive Time Shows

Until 2014, DJ Fresh hosted "The Fresh Drive" alongside Catherine Grenfell, Poppy Ntshongwana, Duran Collett & Carmen Reddy. They were replaced by longtime host Roger Goode, joined by Ms Cosmo, Sureshnie Rieder & 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 on News and Duran Collett on Sports. She later resigned in 2020.
May 2020 saw Nick Hamman, who had previously hosted the Hamman Time show during the mid-morning slot, took over as the host of 5Drive. He is joined by his producer, Mad Money Mike, and the on-air team of Nadia Romanos on News, Bibi Mbangula on Traffic and Jude van Wyk on Sports.

Weekday Evening & Night Programming

As opposed to regular weekday programming, the Evening & Nighttime shows air from Monday to Thursday.
The evening show, Live At Night is hosted by Smash Afrika.
The late night show, The Late Show with JT is hosted by Justin Toerien.

Weekend Breakfast Shows

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 reigns 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.

Weekend Shows

Sticking to their focus on music, the youth-aimed radio station delivers a musically-centred offering throughout the weekend. Hosts of these shows include the 5FM Weekender5 who deliver shows heavily centred on music, like Ms Cosmo, Ryan The DJ, Kid Fonque & Kyle Cassim among others.
Mid-Morning host Msizi James anchors the 5FM Top 40 Chart show every Saturday.

Early Morning Programming

The Early Morning slots, known as “graveyard” slots, air between 01:00 and 06:00 on weekdays, & between 01:00 and 07:00 on weekends.
The weekday graveyard offering, known as TulzOn5, is hosted by Tulani Madala. The weekday early breakfast show, Early Mornings With Karabo is hosted by media personality Karabo Ntshweng.
The weekend graveyard offerings allow for the national radio station to extend its reach across the nation.
The weekend graveyard show is known as Moonlighting On 5 and is hosted by Capetonian Marilize du Plessis. The early breakfast weekend slot, Sunrise On 5 is hosted by Durbanite Leah Jazz.

Broadcast languages

7 DayAve. Mon-Fri
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Jun 20122 246 000928 000