Celebrating Black History Month
To commemorate Black History Month, our Bauer Media UK stations, publications and people all shared their content and voices to honour Black culture and history.听Check out just some of the many ways in which our brands celebrated.
Audio UK initiatives
鈥淚 really hope the work we do in October challenges and inspires us to look every month, and every day, at the music we play, the artists we book and the subjects we talk about”, says Ben Cooper, Group Managing Director, Radio.鈥 “Diversity isn鈥檛 a 鈥榥ice to have鈥, it鈥檚 not something we should be reminded we need to do. It must be at the heart of Bauer because the more diversity of thought we have, the more creative and supportive we are. The strength of our culture and the authenticity of our output depends on it.鈥
“Diversity isn鈥檛 a 鈥榥ice to have鈥, it鈥檚 not something we should be reminded we need to do. It must be at the heart of Bauer because the more diversity of thought we have, the more creative and supportive we are. The strength of our culture and the authenticity of our output depends on it.鈥
– Ben Cooper

Absolute Radio presents the Skin Show:
In celebration of Black History Month,听Absolute Radio鈥檚听听put together a brand new documentary called 鈥楾he Blackness of Rock.鈥

The show’s host, Skin, said of the show 鈥淚鈥檓 going to be talking to many people, some of them friends, some of them people I admire. We鈥檙e going to try and work out where did it all go wrong! When did black people lose Rock as a genre they were perceived to be into, why are we seen as outsiders in a genre we started then helped create and mould, and where are we now with the resurgence through artists from Death Grips to Willow Smith to Michael Kiwanuka. The kids have fallen back into love with guitars again but this time it鈥檚 all very different. Each week I鈥檓 going to try and fit another piece of the puzzle, and take on unique topics of the history of black music.鈥
Greatest Hits Radio (GHR) produces special programme 鈥楤ack To My Roots鈥
Presented by GHR鈥檚 Des Paul, the four-hour-long programmes talked to key GHR guest artists and discussed and played the black music and black music artists who inspired them. Artists included Nile Rogers and Mark King.

In addition, the GHR Network broadcast an exclusive 2-part Bob Marley documentary with contributions from The Marley Family, as well as other documentaries on black music superstars including Earth Wind And Fire, Billy Ocean and Gabrielle to spotlight the contribution of black music to the greatest hits of all time.
Jazz FM explores black music culture
Jazz FM kicked off Black History Month with鈥a dedicated programme called听Jazz FM Voices: Afrofuturism.听The programme鈥痚xplored the sonic significance and cultural revolution that is Afrofuturism and its impact on how we reimagine our futures. Afrofuturist innovators and their legacy children take the stage in a special playlist, featuring the likes of Lee Morgan, Josef Leimberg, and Erykah Badu.

The station鈥檚 presenters also got out and about to spotlight black music. Included in the activities was a trip听to Liverpool听to the culturally significant,听black-owned pub, The Grapes. Landlady, Anna Slater, presented 鈥榯he sound鈥 of her beloved venue from across the years, and artists and customers dropped by to say hello.
The Balimaya Project鈥檚 bandleader, Yahael Camara Onono hosted one a Saturday night鈥痵lot and shared鈥鈥榯he language of Djembe鈥鈥痑nd the role of percussion within the West African Mande Culture.鈥 The station also linked up with sister station, Kiss Fresh, as presenter,鈥Swarzy, made her debut on Jazz FM. She鈥檒l be presenting the music and artists that cross over the two stations, featuring R&B, hip hop, Afrobeat AND Afrobeats.
Jazz FM also explored its new relationship with the organisation鈥Black Lives听In Music. This grassroots organisation released the results of its survey conducted in early 2021 in which over 2000 black musicians shared their experiences of the music industry.
Publishing UK initiatives
Take a Break backs Valerie鈥檚 Law
Take a Break magazine听added its support to UK campaign for Valerie鈥檚 Law (pictured above) which seeks to make specialist training mandatory for all police and other government agencies that support black women and girls affected by domestic violence. It鈥檚 named after Valerie Forde who along with her baby was killed by her ex-partner after reporting his threats to the police.
In addition, the magazine听showcased black entrepreneurs in beauty and in its crafting magazine听Take a Break Makes. The magazine鈥檚 health pages took a look at vitiligo and columnist, Liz Forbes-Stobbe, discussed identity as a black woman in Britain. Black women were also encouraged by听Take a Break听to share what makes them proud.
鈥淏ritain is an increasingly diverse country and it is essential for our future as a brand that we celebrate these extraordinary lives not just during Black History Month but in every issue”, says听Rebecca Fleming, Take a Break Editor.
“In order to do that, we have to be proactive. We have to lead the debate and change old ways of thinking. Over the last year we have taken steps to do that, most obviously by regularly featuring women of colour as cover models, styling them in a way that celebrates their heritage. The old mythology in true life magazines was that issues with black cover models would not sell as well as those with white cover models. We have absolutely destroyed that myth once and for all. The response from the readers to our new models has been great with these issues being among our biggest selling of the year. What BHM does is give us a platform from which we can grow diverse content and keep it at the front of our thinking and planning.鈥
鈥淏ritain is an increasingly diverse country and it is essential for our future as a brand that we celebrate these extraordinary lives not just during Black History Month but in every issue鈥
Rebecca Fleming, Take a Break Editor
Garden Answers spotlights black garden art
Garden Answers听published gardens created by Wayne Amiel听(Jamaica meets Clapham, August 2021)听and Joe Manchester听(Caribbean tribute garden, September 2021), arguing that black culture and history celebrations should not be restricted to just one month.

Landscape magazine features black pottery
Landscape听published a large feature on pottery made by black artists听and extended its ‘only British ingredients’ rule and to include a set of recipes using traditional spices, including a curry dish, which is a first for Landscape. Neither were labelled as Black History Month features, with the magazine听committing instead to an ongoing movement for awareness and change.

Our people also shared their reflections, read this powerful, anonymous poem, from a member of our Bauer Media UK family,听reflecting on this year’s theme of ‘Proud To Be’:
Black 24/7 鈥 Proud to be me
I鈥檓 so proud to be me,
So why do I have to fight to be represented,
Or fight because I鈥檓 represented as JUST. ONE. THING,
Nobody can be strong and independent all the time,
Sometimes I鈥檓 vulnerable, not just because of racism鈥.are you listening?
Maybe I don鈥檛 like chicken and I鈥檓 always punctual,
Maybe I wear my hair in an afro just because I want to, not to make a statement,
I鈥檓 not aggressive but I will react to racial slurs and microaggressions,
I am so much more than Black though,
But I am Black 24/7
It鈥檚 a shame history made my colour a thing.
Every October we negotiate for space to show the world we are so much more than the boxes we have been put in,
Space that shouldn鈥檛 be yours, or theres, but ours.
You have a beautiful house,
But my house has been burning for hundreds of years,
Please help us put the fire out.
We want to inhabit all the spaces that you are in,
Together, equal and forever,
No houses to be torched ever again!
Black is just my skin, but your ancestors made it a thing!
The lines and the boundaries are all man-made so why can鈥檛 we all just behave.
Let鈥檚 bin their rules and balance our world
I love being English and Caribbean,
who says I can鈥檛 be both because of my skin?
Represent me as both,
Embrace me as your sister,
Let鈥檚 share and write new stories together,
I鈥檓 just as English as you,
It doesn鈥檛 matter about our skin鈥檚 hue.
I鈥檓 not being aggressive,
I am just tired of begging,
Let鈥檚 level the playing field and then just play,
I鈥檓 Black 24/7 and that should be ok
Because I鈥檓 proud to be me.
Anonymous.
Eloise Wilson,听Senior Communications Executive,听Bauer Media