The BBC has issued the March instalment of its iPlayer report, documenting significant growth in demand for its radio broadcasts, with one out of every four requests (24%) via its on-demand service consisting of radio programme content, a new iPlayer monthly record.

March was a strong month for BBC iPlayer overall, the service hosted 160 million total requests for TV and radio across all platforms, but its radio programmes by the BBC’s sports teams covering the Cricket World Cup and Chris Moyles’ Longest Show Ever, a broadcast spanning 50 hours (breaking a Guiness World Record), helping to boost figures.

Despite BBC iPlayer serving primarily as an on-demand audio and video service, live streaming of iPlayer content hit new levels in March, with TV making up 15% of all requests and radio holding a 75% share.

January remains BBC iPlayer’s record month, recieving 162 million requests, helped again by sporting events which included The Ashes and FA Cup radio broadcasts and new BBC drama and comedy series’ airing on TV.

Tablet and mobile requests rose one and two percent respectively and are expected to rise in the coming months as Flash-capable handsets and tablet devices become more readily available.

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Radio requests are also set to rise in April, following the recent launch of theRadioplayer service. Radioplayer is a new web app that is designed to bring the corporation’s own publicly funded radio stations together with a wide range of commercial stations, making them available together for the first time.

Radioplayerusers can live stream stations and catch-up services from 228 stations, allowing them to save their favourite stations as presets, allowing them to come back to them without having to set up or log in to an account.

Story byMatt Brian

Matt is the former News Editor for The Next Web. You can follow him on Twitter, subscribe to his updates on Facebook and catch up with him(show all)Matt is the former News Editor for The Next Web. You can follow him onTwitter, subscribe to his updates onFacebookand catch up with him onGoogle+.

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