Beijing Radio and Television Station
Type | Broadcast; state media |
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Country | China |
Availability | in Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei and other parts in China |
Founded | 1 May 1979 |
Owner | Beijing Municipal People's Government |
Official website | www |
Beijing Radio and Television Station (BRTV), formerly Beijing Media Network (BMN), is a government-owned television network in China. It broadcasts from Beijing. The channel is available only in Chinese. Broadcasts in Beijing are on AM, FM, cable FM, digital radio, digital TV and online.
Beijing Media Network was founded on 16 May 1979. It covers China, Asia and North America. China Central Television was called Beijing Television from 1958 to 1978.
In October 2022, BRTV took a minority ownership stake in Kuaishou.[1]
History
Broadcast area | Beijing, China |
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Frequency | FM 94.5 MHz FM 97.4 MHz, FM 100.6 MHz, FM 103.9 MHz, FM 107.3 MHz, AM 603 kHz, AM 774 kHz, AM 828 kHz, AM 927 kHz, Internet |
Programming | |
Format | Contemporary |
History | |
First air date | 1949 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.rbc.cn/ |
Radio Beijing Corporation (RBC; Chinese: 北京人民广播电台; pinyin: Běijīng Rénmín Guǎngbō Diàntái, literally Beijing People's Broadcasting Station), was a family of municipal radio stations that also include news, music, and sports in Beijing.[2]
On 1 June 2020, Radio Beijing Corporation, together with Beijing Television and Beiguang Media, merged into Beijing Media Network.[3]
Beijing Radio and Television Station | |||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 北京人民广播电台 | ||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 北京人民廣播電臺 | ||||||||||
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List of Beijing Radio channels
As of 2021[update], all of these radio channels are also available via Internet.
channel name | started airing date | Frequency | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
English | Chinese | |||
Beijing News Radio | 北京新闻广播 | 2 February 1949 |
|
News (was using FM 100.6 MHz before 1 February 2021) |
Beijing City Radio, Voice of MC | 北京城市广播副中心之声 | 1 March 2005 |
|
formerly Beijing Public Service Radio, renamed to current name in 2020, focus on Beijing Municipal Administrative Center |
Beijing Sports Radio, Voice of Dual-Olympics | 北京体育广播双奥之声 | 1 January 2002 |
|
Sports Broadcast (AM 927 kHz stopped airing Sport Radio, and started airing Youth Radio in 2017), "Voice of Dual-Olympics" suffix added in 2019 |
Beijing Music Radio | 北京音乐台 | 23 January 1993 |
|
Beijing Music Radio (Mandopop) |
Beijing Traffic Radio | 北京交通广播 | 18 December 1993 | FM 95.6 MHz or 103.9 MHz | Traffic |
Beijing Wenyi Radio | 北京文艺广播 | 1 April 1994 |
|
Chinese Literature Broadcast |
The Voice of Jingjinji | 京津冀之声 | February 2021 | FM 100.6 MHz | Broadcast in Jingjinji area. Previously known as Beijing Metro Radio. |
Former radio channels
- Beijing Jingji Radio - internet streaming only channel focus on financial, stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing Qingmeng Radio - internet streaming only channel focus on Blue Network Broadcast, stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing Tongsu Radio - FM 97.0 and internet streaming focus on Popular Music (Mandopop), stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing Shenghuo Radio - internet streaming only channel focus on Beijing City Life Broadcast, stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing Qingyinyue Radio - internet streaming only channel focus on Light Music Broadcast, stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing DAB Radio - internet streaming only channel focus on DAB Broadcast, stopped on 1 January 2022
- Beijing Story Radio - AM 603 kHz & FM 89.1 MHz focus on stories, stopped on 1 January 2023
- Radio Beijing International - AM 774 kHz & FM 92.3 MHz for foreign broadcasting, stopped on 1 January 2023
- Beijing Youth Radio - AM 927 kHz & FM 98.2 MHz for Youths, stopped on 1 January 2023
References
- ^ "Chinese state broadcaster takes 1 per cent stake in short video app Kuaishou". South China Morning Post. 2022-11-07. Archived from the original on 2022-11-17. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "Introduction of RBC.cn 北京广播网". Archived from the original on 2010-05-03. Retrieved 2010-05-25.
- ^ "北京整合广电资源成立广播电视台". 中新网 (in Chinese). 1 June 2010. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
External links
- Official website
- Beijing Renmin Guangbo Diantai Archived 2014-11-25 at the Wayback Machine