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Une radio française en Grande Bretagne

Article tiré du Monde:

http://www.lemonde.fr/actualite-medias/article/2010/11/17/en-grande-bretagne-la-radio-parle-francais_1441544_3236.html
(Est-il vrai qu'il y a 400 000 Français vivant à Londres? Je me demande où les journalistes trouvent leurs chiffres. Ou bien qu'ils les inventent. J'ai lu quelque part qu'il y avait quelques 250 000 Français qui vivent de manière plus ou moins permanente en Angleterre. Cela me paraît plus raisonnable.)

La radio britannique se met au français avec French Radio London. Cette radio 100 % francophone a démarré ses émissions mercredi au Royaume-Uni.
French Radio London, ou FRL, diffuse surtout de la musique, à 80 % française, mais aussi des informations, des chroniques, la météo, une revue de presse. Son fondateur Pascal Grierson dit avoir saisi l'occasion du passage de la Grande-Bretagne à la radio numérique pour lancer son projet, qui vise "la communauté francophone de Londres dans la tranche des 30-45 ans, mais aussi de nombreux Britanniques francophiles".
Les Français de Londres, soit plus de 400 000 personnes,  sont si nombreux que la capitale britannique est souvent qualifiée de "cinquième ville française". La communauté francophone, nichée autour du lycée Charles-de-Gaulle dans le quartier chic de South Kensington, disposait déjà de plusieurs librairies, épiceries fines et fromageries. Elle a désormais une radio, aux accents souvent nostalgiques, qui diffuse vingt-quatre heures sur vingt-quatre sur le Grand Londres (11 millions d'habitants) ou à partir de son site Internet.

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