7HO FM

7HO FM (call sign: 7HHO) is one of 3 commercial radio stations in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. It commenced broadcasting on 13 August 1930, as the first commercial radio station in its city.[1]

7HO FM
Broadcast areaHobart
Frequency101.7 MHz
Programming
FormatAdult Contemporary
Ownership
OwnerGrant Broadcasters
History
First air date13 August 1930 on AM Radio
(1 November 1990 on FM Radio)
Former call signs7HHO
Links
Website7HO FM

The station's initial frequency was 890 kHz AM, in 1935 moving to 860 kHz, then in 1978 to 864 kHz.[2] The "HO" derives from the surname of the founder of the station Ron Hope, not Hobart as many may believe.

On 1 November 1990, 7HO converted to the FM band - 101.7 MHz. The official call-sign was changed to 7HHO but the station identified on-air as "Mix 101 HOFM". It then rebranded as "HOFM", and on 5 November 2007, it re-added the "7" to its branding, changing its on-air name to "7HO FM". The first Announcer on the new FM station was Brett Marley.

7HO FM is owned by Grant Broadcasters and has local programming and news. The music format is adult contemporary music.

Cooke and Moore

The station's breakfast comedy show was for many years hosted by Bob Cooke and Richard Moore.[3] The show started in 1982.[4] Cooke retired in the late 1990s and became a hobbyist woodworker. Moore retired in 2013.[5][6] Prior to working together on the radio show, Cooke and Moore had hosted a television show for children on Hobart's TVT-6 and performed as a stage act.[4]

The Cooke and Moore Show's style of comedy was consistently lowbrow and was very similar to that of Daryl Somers during his tenure as the host of Hey Hey It's Saturday. Cooke and Moore also played a number of fictional character on-air, including Mickey Finn and Knocker Knowles (a shady used car salesman and his dim-witted, former AFL footballer accomplice), Vinnie and the V8s (a music group best known for their hit song 'Outside Coles on a Saturday Night'[4]), Whimmo the Wonder Clown and the R-Rated Cowboy.[4] Much of Cooke and Moore's humour involved general banter between them in the guises of their various characters. Their humour also characteristically featured heavy use of crudeness and sexual double-entendres.

7HO and DAB+

Early in 2019 DAB started commercial broadcasting in Hobart.

As a commercial FM operator in the Hobart area, 7HO was granted space on the new DAB Mux.

This MUX is operated by Digital Radio Broadcasting Hobart Pty Ltd, and operates at 20,000W on 202.928 MHz. It utilises vertically polarised transmissions and is co-located in the Broadcast Australia Site on Mt Wellington, the same facility that houses 7HO's FM Service.

7HO is available on DAB, along with Grant Broadcasters stable mate KIX Country.

1 June 2019 saw a new locally produced station added to the DAB service. It is on-air as 7HO Classic Hits and is DAB only. It carries a mix of classic hits and talk. Weekdays it carries Tasmania Talks, 9 till 12, then it reverts to music programming. Grant Broadcasters locally produced News Service, as per 7HO's FM service, is carried at the top of the hour.

The Hobart Jingle

7HO is famous in London for being mentioned on an advertising jingle for Hobart. Originally played for amusement on Capital Radio during the morning by Chris Tarrant, the jingle quickly became a running gag. This culminated in Chris Tarrant doing a tour of Australia, finishing with broadcasting his morning show to Londoners from the studios of 7HO in Hobart on the last day of his tour.

gollark: We appear to have a minor energy deficit.
gollark: Enjoy your non*-overheating systems!
gollark: How would you like either MORE or LESS energy for VARIOUS SYSTEMS?
gollark: Oh, how fun, I have switches.
gollark: It seems quite intuitive. I just have to click "self-destruct" and it'll work better.

References

  1. "7HO Opened". The Mercury. 14 August 1930. p. 10. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  2. "New Wave Lengths". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 August 1935. p. 11. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  3. "DTV Forum Australia - Australia's Leading Digital TV and AV Forum". Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  4. "Biography". cookeandmoore.com. Archived from the original on 17 August 2018.
  5. "Hail to the King - Richard Moore Retires". 7hofm (on Facebook).
  6. Alice Claridge (22 April 2013). "Mick serves up radio debut". The Mercury. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014.
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