ZNS-1

Radio station in Nassau, Bahamas
25°00′14.10″N 77°21′01.20″W / 25.0039167°N 77.3503333°W / 25.0039167; -77.3503333 (AM 1540)
25°02′48.70″N 77°19′02.65″W / 25.0468611°N 77.3174028°W / 25.0468611; -77.3174028 (FM 104.5)
26°32′N 78°39′W / 26.533°N 78.650°W / 26.533; -78.650 (FM 107.7)Repeater(s)ZNS-1 104.5 MHz (Nassau)
ZNS-1-FM 107.7 MHz (Freeport)LinksWebsiteOfficial website

ZNS-1 (branded as Radio Bahamas) is the oldest broadcast station in the Bahamas. It has a News/Talk format, and broadcasts on 1540 kHz and 104.5 MHz in Nassau, with a repeater in Freeport on 107.7 MHz. It is under ownership of the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas. The AM station has a Class A clear-channel allocation under NARBA and its nighttime signal can be heard throughout the Bahamas, most of Cuba, and southeastern Florida.[1]

History

The Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas (BCB) was created as a state-owned radio broadcast service in 1936, out of a primary concern of providing accurate hurricane warnings to all of the islands of the Bahamas. A callsign of ZNS (standing for "Zephyr Nassau Sunshine) was chosen and the first broadcast was held for the coronation of Britain's King George VI and his wife on May 12, 1937.[2]

In the early days, ZNS broadcast for only two hours per day using a 500 watt transmitter. Programming included global news from the BBC, local news and musical recordings (from the BBC).[3]

All programming from 1936-1950 was aired on a non-commercial basis by the colonial government, but advertising sponsors began to appear in the early 1950's[4] and since that time the station has functioned as a government-owned but commercially funded station.[5]

Today

Radio Bahamas (ZNS-1) operates from its premises on Third Terrace, Centreville in Nassau (the station's home since 1959).[6] Today programming is a mix of news, cultural affairs,[7] and music, and is described as being "the national voice of the Bahamas."

References

  1. ^ Fitz, Jose "The Oldest Broadcaster in the Bahamas"Ten Watts (blog) Oct. 2018 Accessed Jan. 5, 2022
  2. ^ "ZNS to be honored by Bahamas Press Club" Bahamas Weekly (Nov. 15, 2015) (Accessed Jan. 5, 2022)
  3. ^ "About ZNS" ZNSBahamas.com Accessed Jan. 5, 2022
  4. ^ "About ZNS" ZNSBahamas.com Accessed Jan. 5, 2022
  5. ^ Lent, John A. Third World Mass Media and their search for modernity: The Case of Commonwealth Caribbean, 1717-1976 (Bucknell Univ. Press 1977) Accessed Jan. 5, 2022
  6. ^ "About ZNS" ZNSBahamas.com Accessed Jan. 5, 2022
  7. ^ Brown, Susan Love This is the Real Bahamas: Solidarity and Identity in Cat Island (Univ. of California-San Diego 1992), p. 120.

External links

  • Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas
  • FCC information for ZNS-1
  • v
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Radio stations in The Bahamas
Nassau
AM
FM
Defunct
  • Radio Libète Bahamas 91.1
  • ZSR-FM 103.5
Freeport
AM
FM
Spanish Wells/EleutheraMarsh Harbour/Abaco Islands
George Town/ExumaClarence Town
Matthew Town/Inagua
  • ZMIC-FM 106.1
North Andros
  • Praise FM 88.5
Shortwave radioBy branding
Other islands/countries
Bermuda
Cayman Islands
 Cuba
Havana
 U.S.
Florida Keys
Miami-Fort Lauderdale
West Palm Beach
See also
Communications in the Bahamas
Bahamas TV

Notes
1. Unofficial clear-channel station with extended nighttime coverage.
2. Clear-channel station with extended nighttime coverage.
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These AM radio stations have a full-power nighttime skywave signal well beyond their daytime groundwave coverage, by international agreements.
Canada
United States
Mexico
Bahamas
  • ZNS-1
By frequency


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