CKOF-FM

CKOF-FM is a French-language Canadian radio station located in Gatineau, Quebec (near Ottawa, Ontario). Owned and operated by Cogeco, it broadcasts on 104.7 MHz from facilities in the Chemin des Terres neighbourhood of Gatineau, while its transmitter is located in Camp Fortune. The station identifies itself as "104,7 FM".

CKOF-FM
CityGatineau, Quebec
Broadcast areaNational Capital Region, Eastern Ontario, Outaouais
Frequency104.7 MHz (FM)
Branding104,7 FM
Slogan"Vous le Savez Maintenant!"
("Now You Know!")
Programming
Formattalk radio (French)
Ownership
OwnerCogeco
(591991 B.C. Ltd.)
History
First air dateJune 3, 1968 (AM)
2007 (FM)
Former call signsCJRC (1968-2011)
Former frequencies1150 kHz (AM) (1968-2006)
Call sign meaningdisambiguation of sister station CKOI-FM
Technical information
ClassC1
ERP36,000 watts average
100,000 watts peak
HAAT41.5 meters (136 ft)
Links
Websitewww.fm1047.ca

History

The station originally began broadcasting in 1968 as CJRC, on 1150 kHz with a daytime power of 50,000 watts and a nighttime power of 5,000 watts as a class B station, using a directional antenna with slightly different daytime and nighttime directional patterns in order to protect various other stations on that frequency – particularly CKOC in Hamilton.

The station was launched on June 3, 1968[1] by Raymond Crepeau, Marcel Joyal, Robert Campeau and Gerard Moreau with the presence of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, the former prime minister of Canada as part of the Radiomutuel network. Originally its headquarters were at the Sparks Street Mall in Ottawa but were later moved in the old city of Gatineau in the 1980s after a stay on Belfast Road in Ottawa. It became part of the Radiomédia network (later known as Corus Québec) on September 30, 1994, after Radiomutuel merged with Télémédia (that network's Gatineau station, CKCH, was closed down).

On November 24, 2006, the CRTC authorized the station to switch to the FM band.[2] The change of frequency forced CHMY's transmitter in Arnprior, formerly on 104.7, to move to 107.7 FM.

On April 16, 2007, at 7:00 a.m. EDT, CJRC made the move to the FM band on 104.7 MHz as CJRC-FM Le FM parlé de l'Outaouais.

On June 12, 2008, CJRC-FM received approval to increase power from 2,900 to 36,000 watts.[3]

In March 2009, Corus announced plans to drop the talk radio format on CJRC, CHLT-FM in Sherbrooke, CHLN-FM in Trois-Rivières and CKRS-FM in Saguenay, in favour of a classic hits-oldies format branded as "Souvenirs Garantis", effective on March 28, 2009.[4]

Since the implementation of the new CJRC-FM on 104.7 in 2007, the old 1150 AM has been simulcasting the programming of CJRC-FM which was originally to be shut down on March 16, 2009 although as of April 2009, the 1150 AM signal was still in operation. The old AM 1150 CJRC signal finally left the air on May 1, 2009.[5]

Logo as "CKOI 104.7", 2011-2012

In early 2010, the local morning news show featuring Louis-Philippe Brûlé (previously before for several years by Daniel Séguin) was removed in favor of a provincial newscast broadcast from Montreal by Paul Arcand.

On December 17, 2010, the CRTC approved the sale of most of Corus Entertainment stations in Quebec, including CJRC-FM, to Cogeco.[6]

On February 21, 2011, the station rebranded to CKOI 104.7, picking up the hot adult contemporary format and branding similar to its Montreal sister station, CKOI-FM and CJRC-FM change its callsign to CKOF-FM.[7][8]

On June 20, 2012, Cogeco announced that CKOF-FM, along with CKOY-FM and CKOB-FM, will revert to their talk formats on August 20, 2012, all but dismantling the CKOI network. Apart from an expansion of talk programming, no changes in current talk and sports programming are expected for these stations.[9][10]

gollark: I mostly don't *do* anything, so don't worry.
gollark: Not the same thing as actual lax rules.
gollark: That would be strict rules but in the wrong areas.
gollark: There's no real standard for "right" we can use, which is harder.
gollark: Maybe a third factor governs rule strictness *and* people-intelligence.

References

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