Edge Radio

Edge Radio (call sign: 7EDG) is a community radio station situated in the Australian city of Hobart. It is a youth oriented station, with most of its presenters under the age of thirty.

Edge Radio 99.3FM
CityHobart, Tasmania
Broadcast areaGreater Hobart
Frequency99.3 MHz FM
SloganReal Radio, Real Music
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatCommunity Radio
Ownership
OwnerTasmanian Youth Broadcasters
Links
Websitewww.edgeradio.org.au

Edge Radio focuses on local music, running a Tasmanian music show weekly. The studio is located in the University of Tasmania's Hobart campus.

History

Originally set up by Tasmanian University broadcasters, Edge Radio began as a partnership between youth community representatives, media practitioners, the University of Tasmania and the local student union the Tasmania University Union. In the attempt to get a permanent license the new organisation separated its governance structure from the university and the union in order to ensure that it was seen as independent.

Tasmanian Youth Broadcasters Inc. was awarded a broadcasting licence after a four-week trial period in August 2002. The licence was for a community radio station that serviced the youth of Hobart. The station was named Edge Radio and was launched by Machine Gun Fellatio's Chit Chat in February 2003. The station had immediate success, being awarded the Community Radio Station of the Year in its first year of broadcasting by the Community Broadcasting Association of Australia.

On-air format

Programming: There are over 80 programs per week presented by over 120 volunteer workers.

Program Period: Schedules run for 26 weeks. Rotating our schedule facilitates a high level of community participation.

Program Types: There are two main categories of programs,

1. General: talk and information (comedy, journalism arts, sports, film, discussion). Presenters draw from run of station music resources.

2. Music: specific music programs (from hip hop, indie rock, punk, electronic, dance, international and world music etc.). Presenters draw from their own music catalogue, and the stations’ music resources.

gollark: I couldn't say, I've never seriously done forest (or otherwise) arson.
gollark: I mean, it would be less arbitrary by some metrics to go "nothing is a person, human life has value 0" but people don't like that.
gollark: A more arbitrary rule might be better if it lines up with moral intuitions even.
gollark: That is still not actually objective. Also, threshold of probability on that?
gollark: The best you can do is pick a "less arbitrary" one somehow.


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