Radio France
Radio France is a French public service radio broadcaster.
Stations
Radio France offers seven national networks:
- France Inter — Radio France's "generalist" station, featuring entertaining and informative talk mixed with a wide variety of music, plus hourly news bulletins with extended news coverage in the morning, midday, and early-evening peaks
- France Info — 24-hour news
- France Culture — cultural programming covering the arts, history, science, philosophy, etc. together with in-depth news coverage at peak times
- France Musique — classical music and jazz
- France Bleu — a network of 44 regional stations, mixing popular music with locally based talk and information, including:
- FIP — specialising in a wide range of music – classical, hip hop, jazz, chanson, rock, blues, world music – and minimal speech
- Mouv' — pop music, aimed at a young audience
Mission
Radio France's two principal missions are:
- To create and expand the programming on all of their stations; and
- To assure the development and the management of the following four orchestras and choirs:
History timeline
- 1897: A year after Marconi’s experiments, Eugène Ducretet begins his trials of radio broadcasting from a mast on the third level of the Eiffel Tower
- 1921: The weather forecast and the stock market prices are read from a studio in the Eiffel Tower.
- 6 November 1922 (eight days before the BBC): Radiola, the first French private radio transmitter, begins regular broadcasts. It changes its name to Radio Paris in 1924. It is followed by Radio Toulouse and Radio Lyon, and in 1932/1933 by Radio Luxembourg. Before World War II, 14 commercial and 12 public sector radios operate in France.
- 1940–44: In both the German Occupied zone and under the Vichy regime in the south, radio is taken over by the State.
- 1942–43: With the agreement of Vichy, Radio Monte Carlo and its financial holding company la SOFIRAD are born.
- 1944: At the Liberation of France, the state broadcasting monopoly is retained for practical and ideological reasons. Public service radio broadcasting is ensured by the RDF, soon to be called the RTF, then the ORTF in 1964.
- 1955: The commercial station Europe No. 1 begins broadcasting from across the border in the Sarre region of Germany, freed from French occupation in that year.
- 1965: Under the management of Roland Dhordain, the four French radio stations are reorganised: France I and II are merged to "RTF Inter", later renamed "France Inter"; France III is renamed "RTF Promotion", and later "France Culture"; France IV is renamed "RTF Haute Fidelité", and later "France Musique".
- 1975: When the ORTF is broken up into separate TV channels (TF1 (Télévision française 1), antenne 2, France Région 3), technical services (TDF — Télédiffusion de France), archive services and professional training (INA — Institut National de l'Audiovisuel), production and audiovisual creation services (SFP — Société Française de Production) and radio, Radio France gains its independence from other media institutions as the state controlled public service radio broadcaster.
- 1981: Following pressure from the independent and commercial radio lobbies and pirate broadcasters, the newly elected President François Mitterrand allows the licensing of "free" radio stations, to become "radios locales privées", initially with a state subsidy and then financed by commercial advertising (1984), and finally to group themselves into national networks (1986). A private radio sector broadcasting from within French borders is reborn.
- 1999: The daily radio audience (reach) is 83%. They listen on average for over three hours a day. 99% of French homes have a radio. 80% of French households have a car radio, and 26.8% a personal stereo.
- 2000: Radio France re-organises its radio network. France Bleu becomes a regional-only network, primarily on FM (the national AM radio network was re-attributed to France Info) and several FIP stations in large cities were closed down and replaced with youth station Le Mouv'.
- 2015: Radio France announced the end of its Medium Wave (AM) broadcasts at the end of December 31.[1]
Headquarters
Radio France has its headquarters at the Maison de la Radio, a circular building designed by the architect Henri Bernard and inaugurated in December 1963 by President Charles de Gaulle, which stands beside the River Seine in the 16th arrondissement of Paris. In addition to housing Radio France's central services and the studios of several of its channels, the building is home to the Musée de Radio France, a museum of radio and television broadcasting and recording techniques. The building caught fire in October 2014.[2]
See also
References
- ↑
- ↑ "Radio France's Maison de la Radio ablaze in Paris". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
External links
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| Networks and stations | |
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| Local networks |
France Bleu 107.1 •
France Bleu Alsace •
France Bleu Armorique •
France Bleu Auxerre •
France Bleu Azur •
France Bleu Basse Normandie •
France Bleu Béarn •
France Bleu Belfort Montbéliard •
France Bleu Berry •
France Bleu Besançon •
France Bleu Bourgogne •
France Bleu Breizh Izel •
France Bleu Champagne •
France Bleu Corse Frequenza Mora •
France Bleu Cotentin •
France Bleu Creuse •
France Bleu Drôme Ardèche •
France Bleu Gard Lozère •
France Bleu Gascogne •
France Bleu Gironde •
France Bleu Haute-Normandie •
France Bleu Hérault •
France Bleu Isère •
France Bleu La Rochelle •
France Bleu Limousin •
France Bleu Loire Océan •
France Bleu Lorraine Nord •
France Bleu Maine •
France Bleu Mayenne •
France Bleu Nord •
France Bleu Orléans •
France Bleu Pays Basque •
France Bleu Pays d'Auvergne •
France Bleu Pays de Savoie •
France Bleu Périgord •
France Bleu Picardie •
France Bleu Poitou •
France Bleu Provence •
France Bleu Roussillon •
France Bleu Saint-Étienne Loire •
France Bleu Sud Lorraine •
France Bleu Toulouse •
France Bleu Touraine •
France Bleu Vaucluse
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| Other | Maison de Radio France • Radio France Sport • Radio France Multimédia • Radio France Publicité • Musée de Radio France |
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| Associate members and approved participants | Associate members | |
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