National Communications Network, Guyana

National Communications Network (NCN) is a national, state-owned television and radio broadcasting corporation in Guyana. It was formed in 2004 through the merger of the government radio service, Guyana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), and the government-run television service, GTV. NCN's studios are situated on Homestretch Avenue in Georgetown.[1][2][3][4]

National Communications Network
TypeRadio and Television
Country
Guyana
Established2004
Launch date
April 1958
Radio
Fresh FM, Voice of Guyana, Hot FM
Television
Channel 11
Affiliation(s)NBC
CBS (1958-2003)
Fox (2003-2009)
The CW (2009-2016)
Official website
http://www.ncnguyana.com/

History

NCN Studios in 2009

NCN is the descendant of two of Guyana's first radio services: Radio Demerara, which was founded in 1951, and British Guiana Broadcasting Service (BGBS), which was founded in December 1958. The former was a British-owned company, and its licence required the station to broadcast BBC material for 21 hours a week, and programmes provided by the UK's Central Office of Information (in London) for 10 hours a week. The latter focused primarily on sports programmes and the coverage of special events.[1][4]

In 1968 (two years after Independence), the Government of Guyana took over BGBS's broadcasting facilities, which were located at the Broadcasting House on High Street in Georgetown, and the company was renamed the Guyana Broadcasting Service (GBS). In 1979, the Government of Guyana acquired Radio Demerara as well, and the merger of these two radio services resulted in the Guyana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC). On 1 March 2004, GBC and the Guyana Television Broadcasting Company (GTV) combined to form NCN.[1][4]

Radio Service

NCN runs three radio services: Fresh 100.1 FM, re-branded in 2012, formerly Radio Roraima (formerly Channel 1), which uses the radio frequency 760 AM (760 kilohertz on the medium wave band; no longer broadcasting); Voice of Guyana (formerly Channel 2), which uses the radio frequency 560 AM (560 kilohertz on the medium wave band); and an 102.1FM service — Hot FM — which uses the radio frequency 98.1 FM. All three services are controlled by the government.[1]

Television Service

NCN's television service is broadcast on Channel 11 available with an analog antenna, with various regional channels in Berbice, Essequibo, Linden and Demerara.[2]

gollark: No, I mean, autoscale your redstone computer.
gollark: With command block magic, you could autoscale your computer, right?
gollark: In that case, we need a mod adding esolang integration with commands.
gollark: I do think mojang has gone a bit too far with command blocks.
gollark: I agree with all that except about speed.

References

  1. "A brief history of radio in Guyana". Stabroek News. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  2. "Guyana Country Profile". BBC News. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  3. "Training media professionals in research and production of cultural and community-oriented programmes". UNESCO IPDC Database. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  4. Mair, John (2008). "A burgeoning media landscape". In Arif Ali (ed.). Guyana. London: Hansib. pp. 141–3. ISBN 9781906190101.


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