CJCB (AM)

CJCB is a Canadian radio station broadcasting from Sydney, Nova Scotia at 1270 AM. The station is the third oldest radio station in Nova Scotia, hitting the airwaves on February 14, 1929. The station's current format is country music. CJCB is the only commercial radio station in Canada to broadcast on 1270 AM. The station is owned and operated by the Maritime Broadcasting System, a company that owns several other radio stations in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. CKPE-FM and CHER-FM are its sister stations. CJCB is the current broadcast partner of the Cape Breton Screaming Eagles hockey team of the QMJHL.

CJCB
CitySydney, Nova Scotia, Canada
Broadcast areaCape Breton Island
Frequency1270 kHz (AM)
BrandingCJCB AM 1270
SloganCape Breton's country favorites!
Programming
Formatcountry
Ownership
OwnerMaritime Broadcasting System
Sister stationsCHER-FM, CKPE-FM
History
First air dateFebruary 14, 1929
Call sign meaningCJ Cape Breton
Technical information
ClassB
Power10 kW (day and night)
Links
WebcastListen live
WebsiteCJCB AM 1270

History

CJCB played a wide variety of formats Adult Contemporary, Oldies, Top 40 etc., prior to switching formats with longtime country station CKPE-FM in June 1998 after MBS took over the stations. Over the years, CJCB used monikers such as "The Spirit of Cape Breton", "Cape Breton's Variety Station", "Cape Breton's Superstation", and "Cape Breton's Country Favorites".

Sister stations

CJCB-FM

CJCB added FM service with CJCB-FM/94.9 signing on in 1957. In 1981, CJCB-FM became CKPE-FM.

CJCB-TV

CJCB added TV service on October 9, 1954, with the debut of CJCB-TV. The station was sold in 1971.

CJCX

From 1938 to 1976, CJCB was broadcast on shortwave radio under the call sign CJCX at 6.01 MHz.[1]

An earlier CJCB

CJCB was formerly the callsign of a radio station in Nelson, British Columbia that operated in 1923-24.

gollark: Oh, wait, it actually declares a `sorted`, bee.
gollark: #1 is kind of weird because it does some complex stuff then just ignores it and does `sorted`.
gollark: ```python@worddef debugAt(): print(next())```
gollark: The decorators are oddly placed.
gollark: Is #15 *deliberately* written to be weirdly formatted?

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.