Radio in New Zealand
Part of a series on the |
Culture of New Zealand |
---|
State-owned broadcaster
New Zealand was also one of the first countries to introduce Christian radio, with
History
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Early radio
Professor Robert Jack made the first broadcast in New Zealand from the University of Otago physics department on 17 November 1921.[1] The first radio station, Radio Dunedin, began broadcasting on 4 October 1922, but it was only in 1925 that the Radio Broadcasting Company (RBC) began broadcasts throughout New Zealand.
Auckland Radio Service started broadcasting at 7:45pm on 13 April 1923[2] and 1YA was soon being heard on 4 evenings a week as far away as Dunedin.[3] The government facilitated the creation of RBC and gave it a 5-year contract.[4] Auckland Radio was then taken over by the Radio Broadcasting Company of New Zealand on 20 November 1925.[5] A new studio, with a more powerful transmitter and 204 ft (62 m) mast,[6] opened on 9 August 1926 in Newton and could be heard in Rarotonga.[7] It cost about £8,500[8] and used a 500W International Western Electric Company transmitter, able to reach most of the country.[9] RBC's similar 3YA in Christchurch started broadcasting on 1 September 1926.[10] Its 2YA Wellington studio was officially opened on 16 July 1927.[11] Listenership rose rapidly, from 3,588 licences in 1926 to 18,162 in 1927.[12]
Stations in October 1927[13] | Location | 1st licence | Owner |
---|---|---|---|
1YA | Auckland | 1923-05 | RBC |
1YB (later: 1ZB) | Auckland | 1923-09 | La Gloria Gramophone Co |
1ZQ (formerly: 1YD, 1 YQ) | Auckland | 1926-01 | L.R. Keith |
2YA (formerly: 2YB, 2YK) | Wellington | 1923-08 | RBC |
2ZF (formerly: 2YF) | Palmerston North | 1925-12 | Palmerston North Radio Club |
2ZM (formerly: 2YM; later: 2XM) | Gisborne | 1923-10 | Gisborne Radio Co |
3YA (formerly: 3AC, 3AQ) | Christchurch | 1923-08 | RBC |
3ZC | Christchurch | 1927-02 | Finemore Strachan Ltd |
4YA (formerly: VLDN) | Dunedin | 1923-08 | RBC |
4ZB (formerly: 4AB; later: 4ZD, 4XD) | Dunedin | 1923-08 | Otago Radio Association |
4ZM | Dunedin | 1927-10 | J.D. McEwen |
4ZL | Dunedin | 1927-10 | Radio Service Ltd |
In addition to those stations, in 1923 there were also Auckland stations 1AA (C.N. Edwards), 1AB (V.J. Penny), 1AC (L.S. Spackman), 1AH (Hartle & Gray), 1AM (Hamilton Amateur Radio Club), 2YA (then owned by Wilkins & Field, Nelson), 2AB (D. Wilkinson, Motueka), Gisborne had 2AD (P.R. Stevens), 2AE (R.J. Patty), 2AF (W.J. Sinclair), 2AG (I.H. O'Meara), a 2AG station (L.K. Ewen) was also in Whanganui, as was 2AH (Whanganui Amateur Wireless Club), 2AI in Wellington (W.L. Harrison), 2AJ in Stratford (Bransgrove), 2AK (L. Rawson, Hāwera), 2AP (P. Collier, Brooklyn) 2YK (Dominion Radio, Wellington), 2XA (Experimental Station, Wellington), Christchurch stations 3AA (R.J. Orbell), 3AB (F. Vincent), 3AC (Radio Society), 3AF (L.F. Ball), Greymouth 3AD (R.G.F. Blake), 4AA (F.D. Bell, Palmerston), 4AC (R.E. Robinson, Dunedin), 4AD (A.E. Jordan, Invercargill), 4YA was then owned by British Electric Supply and, with 4YO (Radio Supply Company), also in Dunedin, and 1YA (then Auckland Radio Service) had the only three 500 watt transmitters in the country.[14] Further stations in 1926 were 1YC (N.C. Shepherd, Whangārei), 1YD (L.R. Keith, Auckland) and 2YL (B. C. Spackman, Napier).[15]
In 1930, station 1ZR began operating from the
In 1932, RBC's assets were acquired by the government, which established the New Zealand Broadcasting Board (NZBB).[17] This would later be replaced by the New Zealand National Broadcasting Service (NBS) and the National Commercial Broadcasting Service (NCBS).[18] In the 1950s, these merged to become the New Zealand Broadcasting Service (NZBS), a government department. In 1962, this gave way to the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation (NZBC),[19] an independent public body modelled on the BBC in the UK.
Until the 1980s, stations used a series of
As part of the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975, the country switched from 10 kHz to 9 kHz channel spacing on the AM band on 23 November 1978.[21]
The Government deregulated the broadcasting market in 1989, and the number of private stations grew exponentially as a result. Most were locally owned and operated, but eventually became part of the Mediaworks group of stations, and by 2004 the majority of former privately owned stations had been rebranded (see below) and owned by the one company.
FM broadcasting
New Zealand's original FM broadcasting allocation, until 1986 was 89.0 to 94.0 MHz, and then from 1986, until 2000 was 89.0 to 100.0 MHz. Meanwhile, the segments of the band not used for FM broadcasting, such as the band above 100 MHz had been had been allocated to land-based AM mobile radio-telephone users (taxis, fire and others), an allocation that dates back to the late 1950s. New Zealand's FM frequency allocation issue was not fixed until the late 1990s, after those users had been progressively reassigned channels elsewhere, when the band was expanded to the full 20 MHz. New Zealand now uses the standard global allocation of 87.5–108 MHz for FM. Today, full-power FM stations use frequencies between 88.6 MHz and 106.5 MHz, although the band between 101.8 MHz and 103.3 MHz is allocated to future government, Maori and limited short term broadcasting, it is currently unused (as of February 2024). Low-power FM stations use frequencies from 87.6 MHz to 88.3 MHz and from 106.7 MHz to 107.7 MHz. New Zealand permits Radio Data System subcarriers, Radio NZ National uses RDS for its FM network with AF (Alternative Frequency) enabled, commercial radio use of RDS for station identification and program information is widespread.
The first station to broadcast on FM in New Zealand was a temporary station in
Pirate radio
From 1966, Radio Hauraki broadcast from the MV Tiri that was moored in international waters near Auckland, and in 1968 from the MV Tiri II. This was the only ship-based pirate station to ever broadcast in the Southern Hemisphere which it did for 1,111 days, although it was subsequently discovered that the ship had always been moored in the New Zealand territorial waters off the Hauraki Gulf.[23]
In 1970 it was granted a license to broadcast from land and a successor company still broadcasts to the Auckland market under the Radio Hauraki brand and is networked nationwide. In 1972,
Kiwi Radio began broadcasting as 4YZW on 1977, and as WKNZ on the medium wave band in 1978. On 25 March 1980 they launched a pirate Radio Freedom broadcast on both
Public radio
Radio New Zealand
Radio New Zealand is a New Zealand's state-owned national public service radio broadcasting service. It was formed in 1925, and took on its modern form under the Radio New Zealand Act 1995. The broadcaster is bound by the Charter and Operating Principles included in the Act, which is reviewed by the New Zealand Parliament every five years and was last amended in 2004. The broadcaster is required to provoke debate and critical thought, reflect New Zealand and Māori cultural diversity, cater for varied ages and interests, promote music and drama and create a sense of national identity. It is also a Civil Defence broadcaster.[26][27]
Iwi Radio Network
Pacific Media Network
The
Access Radio Network
The
Student Radio Network
The Student Radio Network (known as bNet between 1998 and 2009) is a loose grouping of the current and former student radio stations. These radio stations broadcast local independent news and current affairs, and have provided a platform for new or independent New Zealand artists. The network has co-operated on advertising sales, collaborated on ideas and shared original programming. Some stations are run by
The network began as a grouping of university student radio stations in major centres, and for a while operated as a commercial network of
In 1986 the Weird Culture, Weird Custom compilation was released with twelve tracks on the album, two chosen by competition by each of the six member stations.
Private radio
This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021) |
Central Media Group (Ski FM Network)
The Ski FM Network is New Zealand's largest independent Top 40 radio network, wholly privately owned and operated. From studios in Ohakune, the programme audio is fed to the network via high speed fiber to Whanganui on 93.6 FM, Ohakune 106.2 FM, Ruapehu/Turoa 91.8, National Park/Whakapapa 105.4, Rotorua 90.0 FM, Taihape 107FM, Taumarunui 91.1, Taupo 87.8 FM, and online via Tune-In, iHeart Radio and www.skifmnetwork.co.nz. Originally established in the early 80's as a niche market platform, the brand has seen a few owners over the years and since 2012 the current owners have solidified additional frequencies for use around New Zealand at a later date for additional brands and content. An additional 12 frequencies have been secured for future expansion. The Ski Brand has a regional coverage which includes a population footprint of 135,772 plus the Summer and Winter visitor population spikes, it allows their advertisers to buy at provincial rates and receive metropolitan sized audiences. Currently, with no need for segmented markets, advertisers find the return on investment for full network placement works exceptionally well.
New Zealand Media and Entertainment
The company now runs
MediaWorks New Zealand
Since its inception in 2004, MediaWorks has relaunched local heritage stations to its
Rhema Media
Rhema Media is the country's largest Christian media organisation, and a major New Zealand radio company. Christchurch evangelist Richard Berry first proposed Radio Rhema in the 1960s, and it began permanently broadcasting in 1976. Rhema Media is the founding organisation of United Christian Broadcasters and provides the model of broadcasting for member organisations in other countries. For example, Australia's Rhema FM is modelled on New Zealand's Rhema.
The organisation is predominantly funded by donations, and operates young-oriented
Brian FM
Broadcasting to Marlborough, Nelson, Whanganui, Taihape, Timaru, Oamaru, Ashburton, Alexandra and Cromwell. The station does not use DJs, instead plays music with short ad-libbed commercials.[51]
The Wolf
The Wolf was a short-lived radio network based at Lake Tekapo in South Canterbury. The station was independently owned from its outset in 2001, and broadcast to rural areas where in some cases the larger network stations did not broadcast or operate local stations. The network started at a time when many New Zealand stations had been taken over by New Zealand's two largest radio companies The Radio Network and MediaWorks New Zealand or replaced with a network product based from one of the main centres, particularly Auckland. Due to funding issues, it went off the air permanently in 2003.
The network broadcasts on 100.6 FM in several centres, including
Low power and amateur
One licensee may operate two transmitters anywhere (close together), but a third transmitter must be at least 25 km away from at least one of the first two transmitters.[53] Radio Inspectors regularly monitor and make random unannounced visits to broadcasters, and will impose fines for violations of the regulations. New broadcasters are also subject to an initial compulsory inspection. The high cost of frequencies in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch makes low-power broadcasting particularly popular in these markets.
Radio markets
Radio stations in New Zealand include some network stations and a number of predominantly low-power stations that operate in a single market. Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch are the largest commercial radio markets, surveyed four times a year by GfK New Zealand. Between 1991 and 2015, the survey was conducted by TNS New Zealand.[54] Smaller markets like Waikato receive four surveys a year as well, but the data is an average of the past four quarters, as opposed to isolated quarterly results in the major markets.[55]
Radio New Zealand networks do not participate in commercial market surveys, meaning they are not included in listener numbers and are not counted in market share. However, a Nielsen Media Research survey commissioned by Radio New Zealand suggests its National and Concert stations reach a combined audience of 563,000 unique listeners. The National programme reaches 503,000, or 14 percent of the 15+ population, giving it 10.2 percent station share. The Concert programme reaches 138,000 or 4 percent of the 15+ population, with an estimated market share of 1.4 percent. Commercial radio surveys, by comparison, are based on listeners 10+.[56]
Auckland
Auckland is the country's largest radio market. Surveys are conducted four times a year to garner the listener habits of more than 1.2 million people who live in Auckland's urban centres. Due in part to high levels of peak hour commuter traffic congestion, 74.6 percent listen to the radio on a weekly basis. Newstalk ZB has maintained a long-running first place in the ratings under successive breakfast hosts Paul Holmes and Mike Hosking, with a 13.4 percent station share and a weekly cumulative audience of 178,000 listeners in the latest Q2-14 survey for August to September 2014.[57]
The Edge has 7.7 percent share and 169,200 listeners; ZM has 4.5 percent share and 136,900 listeners; The Breeze has 7.8 percent share and 136,200 listeners; Mai FM has 5.2 percent share and 126,200 listeners; and Coast has 7.8 percent share and 105,400 listeners. Radio Live, The Hits, The Sound, The Rock, George FM, More FM, Flava and Radio Hauraki all maintain audiences over 50,000. Radio Sport, the BBC World Service and Hindi station Radio Tarana also have audiences above 30,000.[58]
Wellington
The Wellington market covers an area of around 335,000 people, where 64.1 percent of people listen to commercial radio during the week. Despite the absence of former local breakfast duo Polly and Grant, ZM continues to lead the ratings with around 42,000 listeners each week and 6.7 percent market share.[59]
Newstalk ZB has local news and a local morning programme, has the highest market share at 14.5 percent, and has around 34,000 listeners. Long-running and predominantly local station The Breeze has 12.7 percent station share and over 38,000 listeners. The Hits and The Edge also have more than 30,000 listeners and more than 7 percent market share.[60]
Christchurch
Around 1,500 people are surveyed for the Christchurch market, in which 72.8 percent of the population of 365,000 people are radio listeners. Under breakfast hosts Simon Barnett and Gary McCormick, More FM consistently leads the ratings with around 70,000 listeners. Newstalk ZB maintains the highest market share at 15.3 percent, with nearly 56,000 listeners. Its local news and morning programme provide a particular focus on the issues that have followed the 2010 Canterbury earthquake.[61]
The Breeze has 57,000 listeners and 9.9 percent station share; The Sound has 44,000 listeners and 9.1 percent station share; and The Edge, The Rock and ZM also have more than 30,000 listeners and more than 3 percent station share.[62]
Other survey markets
The largest of New Zealand's provincial markets is Waikato, in which there are 227,000 people and 79.7 percent of people listen to the radio each week. Locally founded The Edge has the most listeners at 47,000, followed by ZM with 44,000 listeners. Partly local The Hits has 12.2 percent market share and 33,000 listeners, just ahead of locally founded The Rock with 12.1 percent market share and 32,000 listeners.[63][64]
Three other markets also cover the upper North Island. Northland covers 112,000 people, with More FM reaching 27,000 listeners and 17.3 percent market share.[65][66] Tauranga covers 136 thousand people, with Coast reaching 23,000 listeners and 15 percent market share.[67][68] Only 47,000 people live in the Rotorua market, where Flava leads with 8,000 listeners and Coast has 16.6 percent market share.[69][70]
In the central North Island, Taranaki includes a population of 84,000 people, with The Edge attracting 21,000 listeners and The Hits securing 13.8 percent market share.[71][72] The Hawke's Bay market includes 107,000 people, with 23,000 listeners tuning into The Edge and Newstalk ZB maintaining 15.6 percent market share.[73][74] Manawatu has a radio market of 97,000, with 18 thousand listening The Edge and 15 percent of market share going to The Rock.[75][76]
On the South Island, the Nelson market includes 61,000 people, with 15,000 people listening to The Edge and 15 percent of market share going to Coast.[77][78] Dunedin includes 102,000 people, with 19,000 listening to The Edge, 16,000 listening to The Hits and Radio Dunedin maintaining a 14.8 percent market share.[79][80] Southland covers 68,000 people, including 14,000 listening to The Edge. Market share is heavily contested with Coast securing around 16.5 percent and The Rock securing 15 percent.[81][82]
Non-survey markets
There are several radio markets that are not recognised by commercial surveys, but in which there is still competition between commercial radio stations such as
See also
- List of radio stations in New Zealand
- List of New Zealand radio station callsigns
References
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