Media in Townsville

Townsville is the media centre for North Queensland, with 4 commercial radio stations, 4 narrowcast radio stations, 3 community radio stations, 5 ABC radio stations, 3 commercial television stations, one regional daily newspaper and one community weekly newspaper. There are no local Sunday papers although the Sunday Mail (based in Brisbane) publishes a North Queensland edition, which is printed and distributed from Townsville (throughout Northern Queensland). Townsville also has extensive outdoor and indoor advertising media, ranging from taxi advertising to large-format billboards.

The Townsville Bulletin is the dominant newspaper in North Queensland with daily coverage on local, state, national and world news, plus a wide range of sections and liftouts covering health, real estate, youth, beauty, cars and lifestyle. The Bulletin has a $1.40 cover price on weekdays, increasing to $2.40 for the weekend edition, and is in tabloid format. In 2006 the Bulletin had a readership (average) Monday to Friday of 84,000 (up 15.5% on 2005) and weekend readership (average) of 104,000 (up 1.96% on 2005)[1] and circulation (avg) of 27 187 Monday to Friday, weekend circulation (avg) of 41 814.[2] The Townsville Bulletin is owned by News Limited, a subsidiary of News Corporation, and employs over 100 people.

DUO Magazine is a complimentary lifestyle magazine published bi-monthly for men and women aged 25–54 years. DUO is the region's most popular magazine with 45,000+ readers of the printed edition and 33,000+ online readers. 12,000 copies of DUO are distributed to over 450 outlets throughout Townsville, Ingham, Ayr, Charters Towers, and Mt Isa and is carried on all Alliance Airlines flights to the major mines. It is also available from the Qantas Club at Townsville Airport and all leading hotels and accommodation.

Success Business Magazine is a bi-monthly corporate magazine that is distributed free to locals (10,000 copies and a readership exceeding 25,000) in Townsville City, Ayr, Burdekin, and Charters Towers. It is targeted at businesspeople aged between 25–55 years. Success Business Magazine is a glossy magazine that features local businesses through to national brands. It is also distributed at various businesses throughout the North Queensland region such as hotels, coffee shops and shopping centres.

HUXLEY Press is the region's bi-monthly music, Arts and creative culture street press. 5,000 copies (with a readership of approx. 15,000) are distributed via galleries, theatres, performing arts groups, cafes, eateries, major shopping centres, hotels, secondary and tertiary education campuses and more across Townsville, Hinchinbrook, Charters Towers and the Burdekin. Between print issues, the HUXLEY Press website is updated consistently with Arts and Culture stories, interviews and reviews.

Magnetic Island has two competing small publications; Magnetic Island Community News is printed weekly and Magnetic Times is published online.

The North Queensland Register is based in Townsville. However, it services the Queensland rural community from Rockhampton North. Owned by Rural Press Limited, it has a distribution of about 5,000.

Northern Services Courier is an independent newspaper for Defence Force personnel stationed in Townsville.

The Hack (formerly known as The Bullsheet) is the student community newspaper at James Cook University, published by the JCU Student Association. Outlook is the academic community newspaper at James Cook University and it is published by the University.

Broadcast centre for Triple M & hit103.1. Also houses the News Crew from Nine News North Queensland

Radio

StationFrequency
ABC North Queensland630 AMGovernment funded
RadioTAB891 AMRacing/Narrowcast
Classic Gold FM87.6 FMOldies/Narrowcast
Vision Radio Network88.0 FMChristian/Narrowcast
ABC News Radio94.3 FM and 93.5 FMGovernment funded
Hot Country98.9 FMCountry/Narrowcast
Live FM99.9 FMCommunity
Power 100100.7 FMCommercial
ABC Classic FM101.5 FM and 95.9 FMGovernment funded
MMM102.3 FMCommercial
Hit 103.1103.1 FMCommercial
4TTT103.9 FMCommunity
ABC Radio National104.7 FM and 96.7 FMGovernment funded
Triple J105.5 FM and 97.5 FMGovernment funded
Star 106.3106.3 FMCommercial
4K1G107.1 FMIndigenous/Community
Townsvillerocks.com [3]townsvillerocks.comOnline

Television

All three main commercial networks produce local news coverage - Seven Queensland and WIN Television both air 30-minute local news bulletins at 6pm each weeknight, produced from newsrooms in the city but broadcast from studios in Maroochydore and Wollongong respectively. Southern Cross Nine airs a regional Queensland edition of Nine News from Brisbane each weeknight at 6pm, featuring local opt-outs for Townsville and North Queensland.

National and international news bulletins are shown on each respective network in place of or following local news - four are produced in Brisbane, with a Queensland focus (ABC, Seven, Nine and Ten). The Brisbane edition of 10 News First also employs a North Queensland reporter based in Townsville, covering roughly from the tip of Cape York South to Mackay.

Official NameNameOther Info
ABQABC QueenslandKnown as the ABC
STQSeven QueenslandOwned and Operated by Seven Network
RTQWIN TelevisionNetwork Ten affiliate
TNQSouthern Cross NineNine Network affiliate
SBSSBS TelevisionKnown as SBS

New channels broadcast by all the networks in addition to the ones listed above are available on the digital service called Freeview Australia to viewers in Townsville and the surrounding region. These channels include ABC2, ABC3, ABC News 24, SBS Two, One, Eleven, 7Two, 7mate, 9Gem and 9Go!.

Pay TV

CompanySatellite/IPTV
FoxtelSatellite
Fetch TV (iiNet)IPTV
BigPondTV (BigPond)IPTV

Internet

Currently the only major local producer of online journalism is ABC North Queensland. CityLife Magazine reproduces their full content online. The Townsville Bulletin publishes a small quantity of its content on the internet and WIN Television publish local news headlines online. There is also one specialty (Magnetic Island) news website called Magnetic Times. It is run by chief operating officer Jamie Cunningham. There is also a monthly Community magazine called The Townsville 'Zine produced by a Work for the Dole group it can be read at https://issuu.com/townsville.workways

gollark: Say I want to use Signal, which is better for privacy than WhatsApp, but my friends refuse to use Signal too because they don't care. I'm now forced to use WhatsApp and compromise privacy somewhat.
gollark: Well, if people *want* to interact with you for whatever reason, they have to use Facebook or whatever else you're on.
gollark: If you use, say, Facebook, and won't use non-Facebook stuff which is better for privacy, you are giving Facebook money and making people use Facebook to communicate with you.
gollark: I mean, most of the more privacy-oriented stuff is free and open source.
gollark: As I said, it's not doing *much* to other people but it is doing something, which is why your threshold for that should probably be... above zero?

References

https://issuu.com/townsville.workways

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