China National Radio
Radio network | |
Industry | Radio Broadcasting |
Founded |
1949 as Central People's Broadcasting Station 1998 as China National Radio |
Headquarters | Beijing, People's Republic of China |
Products | Radio content, radio programming |
Parent | State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television |
Website | cnr.cn |
China National Radio | |||||||
Simplified Chinese | 中央人民广播电台 | ||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 中央人民廣播電台 | ||||||
Literal meaning | Central People's Broadcasting Station | ||||||
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China National Radio (CNR) is the national radio station of the People's Republic of China. Its headquarters are in Beijing.
History
The infrastructure began with a transmitter from Moscow to set up its first station in Yan'an (延安). It used the call sign XNCR ("New China Radio") for broadcasts, and is the first radio station set up by the Communist Party of China in 1940.[1]
In the west, it was known as the Yan'an New China Radio Station (延安新华广播电台) broadcasting two hours daily.[1] In China, it was called the Yan'an Xinhua Broadcasting Station, which was established on December 30, 1940.[2]
On March 25, 1949, it was renamed Shanbei Xinhua Broadcasting Station (陕北新华广播电台) after it departed from Yan'an. It began to broadcast in Peiping under the name of Peiping Xinhua Broadcasting Station (北平新华广播电台). On December 5, 1949, it was officially named to Central People's Broadcasting Station, two months after the establishment of the People's Republic of China. The station offered 15.5 hours of service daily.[1]
Mao Zedong emphasized that all citizens should listen to the station on May 5, 1941. The "Central Press and Broadcasting Bureau" was the driver in pushing all schools, army units, and public organizations of all levels to install loud public speakers and radio reception base.[1] By the 1960s, 70 million speakers were installed reaching the rural population of 400 million.[1]
Central People's Broadcasting Station innovated wired transmissions, which were linked to the commonly found telephone poles hanging with loud speakers. It was part of Mao's ideology of delivering "Politics on Demand". The station served as the headquarters for propaganda during the Cultural Revolution.[1]
The station was later renamed China National Radio.[2] It would move to a new building in 1998.
Present
CNR currently has ten channels, with 198 hours of daily broadcasting through satellite. Channel one mainly broadcasts news in Mandarin to a national audience. Channel two, Business Radio, broadcasts economic, scientific and technological information and service programs in Mandarin throughout China. Channel three, Music Radio, is an FM stereo music channel. Channel four, Metro Radio, provides life programs exclusively to the listeners in Beijing. Channel five and Channel six, Cross-straits Radio, broadcast programs for the listeners in Taiwan. Channel seven, Huaxia Radio, broadcasts programs for the listeners in Hong Kong, Macau and the Pearl River Delta. Channel eight, Nationality Radio, broadcasts programs for the minority ethnic groups in Mongolian, Tibetan, Uigur, Kazak and Korean. Channel nine, Story Radio, broadcasts entertainment programs, including comic crosstalk and storytelling series programs, etc. After the recent reform, CNR's programming and production processes are increasingly specified, targeted and personalized. CNR has 40 correspondent branches in major cities including Hong Kong and Macau, and dispatched correspondents in Taiwan.
Channels
Radio channels
Programme | Chinese | Description | Freq |
---|---|---|---|
The Voice of China (Also: News Radio) | 中国之声 | The First Programme, a national service, mainly news and commentaries, 24 hours a day Major programs: News and newspapers Summary, National Network News (全国新闻联播), CNR News (央广新闻) | on MW 540, 639, 945, 981, 1035, 1053, 1116 etc., on SW 4750, 5945, 6030, 7230, 9455, 11710, 13610, 15380, 17580 etc., and on FM 106.1 in Beijing, FM95.8 in Shenzhen (Frequencies on FM may vary in different cities) |
China Business Radio | 经济之声 | The Second Programme, a national service, mainly business news, 24 hours a day | on MW 630, 720, 855, on SW 6175, 7245, 9620, 11665 etc., and on FM 96.6 in Beijing (Frequencies on FM may vary in different cities) |
Music Radio | 音乐之声 | The Third Programme, broadcasting Chinese and world pop music on FM in many main cities in China, broadcasting during GMT+8 6-24 | on FM 90.0 in Beijing, FM101.2 in Shenzhen (Frequencies on FM may vary in different cities) |
Golden Radio | 经典音乐广播 | The Fourth Programme, broadcasting in Beijing only, mainly classic music, broadcasting during GMT+8 5-1 | on FM 101.8 in Beijing |
The Sounds of the Chinese | 中华之声 | The First Taiwan Service, broadcasting in Mandarin, mainly news, entertainment, talk, broadcasting during GMT+8 5-1 | on MW 549, 765, 837, 1116 and SW 5925, 7620, 9685, 11620, 11935 in Taiwan Area, on FM 102.3 in Fuzhou, Putian, eastern coastal areas of Quanzhou and Matsu, and on FM94.9 in Xiamen, Zhangzhou, south part of Quanzhou and Kinmen |
Sound of the Divine Land | 神州之声 | The Second Taiwan Service, broadcasting in dialects including Amoy, Hakka and entertainment in Mandarin, broadcasting during GMT+8 6-24 | on MW 684, 909, 1089 and SW 6165, 9170, 11905, 15710 in Taiwan Area,on FM 106.2 in Fuzhou, Putian, eastern coastal areas of Quanzhou and Matsu, and on FM107.9 in Xiamen, Zhangzhou, south part of Quanzhou and Kinmen |
The Sounds of Huaxia | 华夏之声 | The Zhujiang delta, Hong Kong and Macao Service, broadcasting in Mandarin and Cantonese, broadcasting during GMT+8 5-2 | on FM 87.8/104.9 and AM1215 in Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Hong Kong and Macau |
Sounds of the Nationalities | 民族之声 | The Minorities Service, including Korean and Mongolian service. | CNR's minorities service (including Uygur,Tibetan and Kazakh service below) transmitted on AM and FM in radio stations of minority ethnics' areas, such as Jilin, Xinjiang, Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Qinghai, Gansu, Sichuan, Yunnan etc.
Other languages on AM 1143 in Beijing, broadcasting during GMT+8 5-23 Mongolian at 5-14;Korean at 14-23 (All above are Beijing Time) |
Sounds of the Literary | 文艺之声 | Broadcasting in Beijing only, all literature and entertainment programmes, broadcasting during GMT+8 5-2 | on FM 106.6 in Beijing |
Sounds of the elderly | 老年之声 | Broadcasting in Beijing only, for the elderly, including entertainment, health programmes etc., broadcasting during GMT+8 4:00-1:30 | on AM 1053 in Beijing |
Entertainment Radio | 娱乐广播 | Broadcasting in Beijing only, mainly entertainment, broadcasting during GMT+8 6-2 | on AM 747 in Beijing |
Highway Radio | 中国高速公路交通广播 | Broadcast nationwide on highways, offering highway information | on FM 99.6 in Beijing, Tianjin and FM 90.5 in Hunan |
Tibetan Radio | 藏语广播 | Tibetan service, broadcasting during GMT+8 6-24 | on AM 1098 and SW 6010,7350,7360,9480,9530,11685,15570 |
Uygur Radio | 维吾尔语广播 | Uygur service | on AM 1098 in Beijing |
Sounds of Hong Kong | 香港之声 | Broadcasting in Hong Kong only,in Mandarin and Cantonese,24 hours a day | on DAB+ 32 in Hong Kong |
Kazakh Radio | 哈萨克语广播 | Kazakh service | on AM 1008 and SW 6180,9630,11630,12055 |
TV channels
See also
- Broadcasting Corporation of China (First Nationalist Party Radio)
- China Central Television
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Miller, Toby (2003). Television: Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies. Routledge Publishing. ISBN 0-415-25502-3
- 1 2 CNR website. "CNR website." CNR introduction. Retrieved on 2007-04-29.
- ↑ QVC Announces China Joint Venture, QVC news release via PR Newswire, Cleveland, OH, 20 March 2012. Retrieved: 11 August 2014.