Radio Mindanao Network

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Radio Mindanao Network (RMN Networks)
Type private
Founded August 28, 1952
Headquarters Flag of the Philippines Makati City, Philippines
Key people Eric S. Canoy, President and CEO Henry R. Canoy, Chairman, Butch S. Canoy, VP for Operations
Industry Broadcast radio network
Website RMN

Radio Mindanao Network Inc. or RMN Networks is the second largest radio network in the Philippines next to Manila Broadcasting Company. It was once the largest radio network in the country with large number of radio station affiliates nationwide. The network's first radio station is DXCC, established in Cagayan de Oro on the island of Mindanao in August 28, 1952. The callsign meant the radio partnership of Canoy and Cui. It was changed later to a neutral meaning Cagayan de Oro Community, as the founder would soon write it in his memoir[1].

The Network studios and office in Metro Manila are located at the 4/F Guadalupe Commercial Complex Bldg., EDSA Guadalupe, Makati City.

Contents

[edit] History

Sometime in 1948, Henry R. Canoy together with bosom friends Robin Cui and Vicente Rivera set-up two home built tube radio receivers bought from Fideng Palacio of Puntod and placed them in an abandoned chicken poultry house situated at the corner of Velez and del Pilar streets in Cagayan de Oro for the purpose of listening radio broadcast from Manila[2]. Canoy and friends ended up listening radio broadcast at night when reception was better[3]. Eventually, they were all convinced to make one. And the group managed to self-assemble a 30 watts radio transmitter from surplus parts bought at Raon Street in Quiapo, a district of Manila. Henry Canoy broke the airwaves as Pirate radio in 1949 declaring "This is Cagayan de Oro calling...". As it was an unauthorized test broadcast, it did not have the assigned call letters from the Radio Control Office (RCO) to which the station could be associated with.


In 1950 Canoy, upon the prodding of his lawyer brother Reuben R. Canoy, decided to established a more powerful radio station legally by applying for a congressional franchise in Manila to support its lawful operation. In 1951, he set up the fledging station in partnership with Robin Cui, Max Suniel, Oscar Neri and Andres Bacal as equity partners with P10, 000 capital. on 23 June 1952 he was granted a permit to maintain and operate a radio broadcasting station.


Using the “Radio Amateur’s Handbook” as their guide and also with surplus parts bought from Raon in Quiapo district of Manila, they built their own 500-watt AM transmitter with the assistance from Far East Broadcasting Company engineers, American Dick Rowland and Byrd Bruneimer. The transmitter was transported to Mindanao aboard the boat MV Snug Hitch. With only a telescopic steel pole as antenna borrowed from the Bureau of Telecom, the improvised horizontal radio antenna was mounted by the team which include Ongkoy Padero, former vice president for engineering of CEPALCO, attaching one end of a copper wire to the pole and the other end to a 30 meters coconut tree a block away . While their first “transmitter building” was financed with a P5, 000 “duck farm” loan from the Philippine National Bank. The Radio Control Office (RCO) headed by Mr Jose Viado, assigned the station a broadcast frequency of 1560 kHz.


On July 4, 1952, it went on air for test broadcast the second time coinciding with the birthday of his mother. It officially started broadcasting on August 28, 1952, also coinciding with the town fiesta of San Agustin, the patron saint of Cagayan de Oro archdiocese. Listeners anticipated the first words they would hear on radio and were greeted the station ID and the following words “You are tuned to Station DXCC, broadcasting with a power of 500 watts on 1560 kilocycles from Cagayan de Oro’s ” Gateway to Mindanao!” and every hour thereafter. The stations first live broadcast coincides with its opening and the program involves the airing of a 3-hour “Anejo Rum” show from Plaza Divisoria, a central park in downtown Cagayan de Oro, for which Canoy billed La Tondena executive Hugo Chan Hong the sum of P500 as payment for the radio coverage. The Radio signal was able to reach Del Monte plantation in Bukidnon 30 km away and as far as Australia through ham radio operations which managed to call back[4].(RMN The Henry R. Canoy Story,ISBN ?, Copyright 1997)


In 1954, Henry R. Canoy visited the United States under an observation grant. Instead of going to the giant networks and other big cities, he opted to be taken to a small backwater town of Greeley, Colorado, and he came upon a station that was doing exactly what DXCC was already trying to do in Mindanao. Its broadcast fare was peppered with farm prices, market and road conditions, weather warnings and personal messages. He came back with the blueprint for DXCC, which is entertainment, information and most of all education to the public. Its core values carried it to this day[5].


The success of its broadcasting concept enabled DXCC to expand to Iligan, then to Butuan and Davao. By 1957, the station with a coconut tree for an antenna had given birth to four others. And so the string of community stations became Radio Mindanao Network.


In 1962, RMN's innovative approach to broadcasting drew the interest of another visionary business leader, the late Andres Soriano Sr. of San Miguel Corporation who eventually bought the majority shares of RMN and brought the radio network to Manila, the first provincial station to do so. "The Sound of the City" concept was born with the establishment of DZHP in Metro Manila. Its format was strictly music and news. RMN joined forces with the Philippine Herald and Channel 13 to form the powerful first tri-media organization. That association gave RMN at the forefront of broadcast journalism and public service. Other "Sound of the City" stations soon followed in Cebu in 1963 (DYHP), DZHB in Baguio and DXHP in Cagayan de Oro in 1968.


In 1968, RMN made a "first" in Philippine radio history by initiating the national newscasts via microwave. Fast, direct and crystal clear network newscasts emanating from the Tri-Media News Central in Manila brought the events as they happened in all parts of the country via stations DZHP in Manila, DZHB in Baguio, DYHB in Bacolod, DYHP in Cebu, DXVM in Cagayan de Oro, DXIC in Iligan and DXDC in Davao.


From 1969 to 1970 three more community stations emerged - DXRS in Surigao, DYHB in Bacolod and DZHN in Naga. In early 1972, station DXHP in Cagayan de Oro was transferred to Bislig, Surigao del Sur. By 1972, RMN had twelve (12) AM stations under its wings.


In 1973, with a constitutional limitation prohibiting the ownership of media by non-Filipinos or corporations not 100% Filipino owned, Henry Canoy's group brought out the Soriano-San Miguel group holdings in RMN.


In 1975, the call letters of the Manila flagship station, DZHP was changed to DZXL. Together with this, English programming gave way to Filipino. RMN's AM stations were broadcasting in three major dialects, Filipino, Cebuano and Ilonggo.Noted columnist Teodoro Valencia joined RMN as its Chairman of the Board. Under his guidance RMN was able to secure a loan from the Development Bank of the Philippines to finance its massive expansion and development program.


In 1978, RMN's major expansion program was launched which include the upgrading of the technical facilities of its existing stations and the establishment of additional AM and FM stations. Among the stations that were added to the roster of RMN stations were: DXVM-FM in Cagayan de Oro, DXXL-FM in Davao, DYXL-FM in Cebu, DYRI-AM and DYIC-FM in Iloilo, DWHB-FM in Baguio, DYVR-AM and FM in Roxas, DYKR in Kalibo, DXKR in Pagadian and DYCC in Calbayog. DXDR-AM in Dipolog was added in 1981.


RMN also increased its coverage by entering into tie-up arrangements with smaller networks. Under this scheme, RMN provided programming, marketing, technical and management expertise where these small stations would be found wanting. This gave birth to a new name for these stations under the RMN umbrella - Radio Mindanao Network, Inc. and Associates.


In 1985, the programming of all RMN FM stations were also re-oriented to cater to a younger pop music audience. This was in line with the network's philosophy of positioning to be No.1 in listenership ratings.To give more emphasis to the emerging FM station market, RMN also divided its operations into two Operating Divisions, AM and FM.


In 1990, RMN undertook another major expansion program which entailed the addition of seven FM radio stations. A permit for RMN's first TV station located in Cagayan de Oro City was also granted. In April,1991,President Corazon Aquino signed into law Republic Act 6980 entitled "An Act Renewing the Franchise Granted to Radio Mindanao Network, Inc. under Republic Act Numbered Thirty-One Hundred Twenty-Two to another Twenty-Five (25) years from the date of approval of this Act". This was the first broadcast franchise approved under President Aquino's term of office.


On August 28,1991, TV-8, RMN's first television station went on the air in Cagayan de Oro City. Thirty nine years after its start, RMN was now venturing into television. In December 1991, RMN was also granted a permit to operate a UHF television station in Metro Manila.


In 1998, it went global by establishing the first Philipppine radio station to conquer the United States airwaves through WRMN in New York.


In June 2007,RMN fm station DWKC 93.9 in Manila was the first commercial station in the country to broadcast with HD Radio technology. It broadcast in three HD Radio digital audio channels along with its pre-existing analog signal. The operation of its facility was in high-level combined hybrid mode with an existing 35kW analog transmitter, a new Nautel 1kW HD Radio transmitter, with the digital exciter, importer and exporter providing the digital signal component[6].


Fifty years after its humble beginnings in Cagayan de Oro, Radio Mindanao Network, Inc. and Associates owned and operates 50 AM and FM radio and television stations. 55 years later, the network paved the way for excellence in news, public affairs, and public service broadcasting in the country.

[edit] Legacies

  • First radio station in Cagayan de Oro.
  • First radio network from the province to branch out in Metro Manila.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to consolidate tri-media operations in print, radio and TV.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to broadcast national newscasts via microwave.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to branch out to television ventures.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to broadcast overseas.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to use internet broadcast throughout the world.
  • First radio network in the Philippines to use HD radio.
  • Biggest radio networks in the Philippines.


[edit] Slogan

  • RMN: At Your Service, Wherever You Are.
  • RMN: Kasama Mo!

[edit] RMN AM radio stations

Branding Callsign Frequency Power Location
RMN Manila DZXL 558 kHz 50 kW Manila
RMN Bacolod DYHB 747 kHz 10 kW Bacolod
RMN Bislig DXHP 999 kHz 10.1 kW Bislig
RMN Butuan DXBC 693 kHz 10 kW Butuan
RMN Cagayan De Oro DXCC 828 kHz 10 kW Cagayan De Oro
RMN Calbayog DYCC 936 kHz 1 kW Calbayog
RMN Cebu DYHP 612 kHz 10 kW Cebu
RMN Cotabato DXMY 729 kHz 5 kW Cotabato
RMN Davao DXDC 621 kHz 25 kW Davao
RMN Dipolog DXDR 981 kHz 5 kW Dipolog
RMN Dumaguete DYWC 801 kHz 5 kW Dumaguete
RMN General Santos DXMD 1152 kHz 10 kW General Santos
RMN Iligan DXIC 711 kHz 10 kW Iligan
RMN Iloilo DYRI 774 kHz 10 kW Iloilo
RMN Kalibo DYKR 1161 kHz 5 kW Kalibo
RMN Bukidnon DXMB 648 kHz 5 kW Malaybalay
RMN Marbel DXKR 639 kHz 5 kW Marbel
RMN Ormoc DYRR 792 kHz 5 kW Ormoc
RMN Pagadian DXPR 603 kHz 5 kW Pagadian
RMN Puerto Princesa DYPR 765 kHz 10 kW Puerto Princesa
RMN Roxas DYVR 657 kHz 5 kW Roxas
RMN San Carlos DXRZ 1431 kHz 1 kW San Carlos
RMN Surigao DXRS 1206 kHz 5 kW Surigao
RMN Tagbilaran DYXT 1071 kHz 1 kW Tagbilaran
RMN Zamboanga DXRZ 900 kHz 5 kW Zamboanga

[edit] i-FM stations

Branding Callsign Frequency Power Location
I! FM Manila DWKC-FM 93.9 MHz 35 kW Manila
I! FM Bacolod DYHT-FM 94.3 MHz 10 kW Bacolod
I! FM Baguio DWHB-FM 103.9 MHz 10 kW Baguio
I! FM Butuan DXXX-FM 100.7 MHz 10 kW Butuan
I! FM Cagayan De Oro DXVM-FM 99.1 MHz 10 kW Cagayan De Oro
I! FM Cebu DYXL-FM 93.9 MHz 25 kW Cebu
I! FM Cotabato DXCC-FM 90.9 MHz 5 kW Cotabato
I! FM 107.9 Dagupan DWHT-FM 107.9 MHz 5 kW Dagupan
I! FM 104.7 Dagupan DWON-FM 104.7 MHz 10 kW Dagupan
I! FM Davao DXXL-FM 93.9 MHz 25 kW Davao
I! FM Dipolog DXZZ-FM 94.1 MHz 5 kW Dipolog
Power 91 FM DYGB-FM 91.7 MHz 5 kW Dumaguete
I! FM General Santos DXCK-FM 91.9 MHz 10 kW General Santos
I! FM Iligan DXYX-FM 102.3 MHz 10 kW Iligan
I! FM Iloilo DYIC-FM 95.1 MHz 10 kW Iloilo
I! FM Laoag DWHP-FM 99.5 MHz 10 kW Laoag
I! FM Naga DWNX-FM 91.1 MHz 10 kW Naga
I! FM Pagadian DXWD-FM 96.7 MHz 5 kW Pagadian
I! FM Puerto Princesa DYPR-FM 99.9 MHz 1 kW Puerto Princesa
I! FM Roxas DYVR-FM 93.9 MHz 5 kW Roxas
I! FM Surigao DXKE-FM 94.1 MHz 5 kW Surigao
I! FM Tacloban DYXY-FM 99.1 MHz 10 kW Tacloban
I! FM Zamboanga DXWR-FM 96.3 MHz 10 kW Zamboanga

[edit] RMN TV stations

Branding Callsign Ch. # Power Location
RMN 31 Manila DWKC-TV TV-31 50 kW Manila
RMN 26 Baguio DWHB-TV TV-26 5 kW Baguio
RMN 32 Naga DWNX-TV TV-32 5 kW Naga
RMN 26 Iloilo DYRI-TV TV-26 5 kW Iloilo
RMN 36 Bacolod DYHB-TV TV-36 5 kW Bacolod
RMN 31 Cebu DYAR-TV TV-31 5 kW Cebu
RMN 31 Zamboanga DXRZ-TV TV-31 10 kW Zamboanga
RMN 8 Cagayan De Oro DXHB-TV TV-8 5 kW Cagayan De Oro
RMN 33 Cagayan De Oro DXVM-TV TV-33 5 kW Cagayan De Oro
RMN 31 Davao DXKC-TV TV-31 5 kW Davao

-and selected cable TV stations nationwide

[edit] Notes

The pioneer radio broadcasting station in Mindanao was dxMC-AM founded in 1949 and owned by Guillermo Torres of the University of Mindanao in Davao City. It later became UM Broadcasting Network. The second, dxAW, was established by Alfred James Wills, a retired US Army Signal Corps officer. There were four others that operated in Butuan, Surigao, Pagadian and Ozamiz. DxCC-AM is the 7th legally operating radio station having been founded in 1952[7].

[edit] References

[edit] External links