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RJR 94 FM

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was founded as a public broadcasting corporation operated by the government. At that time, RJR's operating company was renamed Radio Jamaica Ltd. and the company began offering non-stop music service three years later. In 1962, RJR also introduced "Musipage" which presented live musical performances
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Network. Initially only four medium-wave, signal transmission sites broadcast throughout the island. In 1951 wire radio service was established from a central broadcasting station. Transmissions were sent to rediffusion speaker boxes for which subscribers paid three-pence per day. To increase the
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was developed and the speaker service was discontinued. The Jamaican government acquired the station from the British Rediffusion Group in the 1970s and divested its interest through stock sales to organizations and individuals to facilitate RJR becoming a fully Jamaican-owned company. A second
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station playing music only was founded in 1972 and RJR expanded again in 1984, adding a third station FAME FM. In 1990, simulcast broadcasting was developed to broaden programming to include live programming on national events.
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The station broadcasts several programmes featuring Jamaican and international music, news, talk shows, listener questions and professional answers.
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listener base RJR distributed around 200 rediffusion speakers to police stations, retail stores and schools. In 1953, Jamaica became the first of the
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when RJR began using the technology. By 1954, there were over 57,000 rediffusion boxes distributed throughout the country.
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The company maintains the RJR radio channel as their flagship, plus a number of other radio channels.
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On 9 July 1950, a commercial license to operate as a subsidiary of the
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at its studios. In 1968, rediffusion became obsolete when
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Index

Radio Jamaica
Jamaica
Kingston
British Rediffusion Group
British colonies
FM broadcasting
Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation
transistor
radio transmission
Ralston McKenzie
Ralston McKenzie



"For your listening pleasure"
The Gleaner
Newspaperarchive.com
Open access icon
"RJR 94FM"
Gleaner Communications Group
the original
"Born in the Fires of World War II"
ISSN
0799-4338
RJR FM website
Categories
Radio stations in Jamaica
Radio stations established in 1950
News and talk radio stations

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