Radio City Talk had made a number of changes to its format during its history.
Initial format (January 2008 – June 2009) The original team of presenters on the station included actors
Margi Clarke and
Dean Sullivan, horse racing commentator and drive time presenter Paul Jacobs, football personalities
Ian St John and
John Aldridge, broadcaster Kim Hughes who presented breakfast with Phil Easton, veteran talk show hosts
Pete Price and Roy Basnett, and newspaper journalists
Larry Nield and
Brian Reade.
Trisha Goddard also hosted a Sunday evening show called
Talk to Trisha, broadcast down-the-line from the presenter's home in
Norwich. Regular news, sport and business bulletins were broadcast, as well as lifestyle, celebrity and comedy features. In its first
RAJAR released on the station's first anniversary, City Talk 105.9 had a weekly audience of 63,000 listeners and a total of 364,000 listening hours (averaging at 5.8 hours per listener). The business plan for the station anticipated the audience would be around 75,000 listeners, tuning in for 5 hours a week, producing 375000 listening hours each week. Furthermore, according to an analysis of
RAJAR figures, the station only recorded a 4% listening share.
Second format (June 2009 – January 2010) In March 2009,
Ofcom published a request from Bauer Radio to change the format of City Talk. The new format would retain all-speech programming at weekday breakfast & drivetime and weekend late breakfast. On weekdays, non-peak output during daytime hours would be mixed speech and soft pop-led music. Outside of weekday daytime, the new format would allow shared programming with Bauer's other Liverpool stations. The move was taken due to concerns within Bauer about the commercial viability of City Talk as a format. Research conducted by Bauer in support of the move suggested that those listeners who were actively choosing not to listen to the station as an all-talk service would reconsider the station were music included alongside the speech content. although the new licence still required the station to air late-night phone-ins and Saturday afternoon sports coverage, in addition to the daytime talk programming requested by Bauer. Bauer was also told that the simulcasting of Magic 1548 content onto the City Talk frequency would not be permitted, but that some programming elements could be shared with Radio City. The request, which also removes requirements for all-speech shows at peak times and a late night phone-in, was approved three months later. The switchover to the new rock, sports and talk format and transmission on AM took place on Monday 7 December 2015. Radio City Talk relaunched with a full schedule of live shows on weekdays, presented by Steve Hothersall (
The Kick Off), Mick Coyle (
Liverpool Live) and Adam Caterall (
Full Time) and the
Pete Price 'Late Night City' show being relayed from Radio City 2. Weekend programming consisted of specialist, sport and music output. ==The earlier City Talk experiment==