Beijing Traffic Radio: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox radio station |
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| name = Beijing |
| name = Beijing Traffic Radio |
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| logo = bj1039.jpg |
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| city = [[Beijing]] |
| city = [[Beijing]] |
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| area = [[Beijing]] |
| area = [[Beijing]] |
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| branding = Beijing Jiaotong Guangbo |
| branding = Beijing Jiaotong Guangbo |
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⚫ | '''Beijing Traffic Radio''' ({{zh|s=北京交通广播}}) is Beijing's traffic station at 103.9 FM. It is one of the [[radio station]]s of the [[Radio Beijing Corporation]]. This particular channel mostly broadcasts commercials in Mandarin and traffic reports. The format of this channel can be compared to the traffic channels provided by [[XM Radio]] and [[Sirius Satellite Radio]], the commercial all-traffic station [[CHMJ]] in [[Vancouver|Vancouver, British Columbia]], [[Canada]], or the "Highway Advisory radio stations" (the low power AM stations near points along [[Interstate highways]] in the [[United States]]). |
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⚫ | '''Beijing |
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The station has one million listeners and its staff view 80% of Beijing's roads from its headquarters at the [[Beijing Traffic Management Bureau]] headquarters.<ref name="cd1">{{cite journal | author=Liu Baijia| title=Road ahead looking clearer for Beijing's motorists| journal=China Daily| year=2008| volume=April| issue=26| url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2008-04/26/content_6645779.htm}}</ref> It also has a network of retired volunteers with apartments at key junctions who are able to draw attention to major traffic problems. |
The station has one million listeners and its staff view 80% of Beijing's roads from its headquarters at the [[Beijing Traffic Management Bureau]] headquarters.<ref name="cd1">{{cite journal | author=Liu Baijia| title=Road ahead looking clearer for Beijing's motorists| journal=China Daily| year=2008| volume=April| issue=26| url=http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2008-04/26/content_6645779.htm}}</ref> It also has a network of retired volunteers with apartments at key junctions who are able to draw attention to major traffic problems. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* [http://www.fm1039.com.cn/index/ Official Website (Chinese)] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060927212525/http://www.fm1039.com.cn/index/ Official Website (Chinese)] |
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{{Beijing Radio}} |
{{Beijing Radio}} |
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[[Category:Mandarin-language radio stations]] |
[[Category:Mandarin-language radio stations]] |
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[[Category:Radio stations in China]] |
[[Category:Radio stations in China]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Mass media in Beijing]] |
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Latest revision as of 10:41, 27 October 2021
Broadcast area | Beijing |
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Frequency | 103.9 (mHz) |
Branding | Beijing Jiaotong Guangbo |
Programming | |
Format | "traffic" |
Ownership | |
Owner | Beijing Renmin Guangbo Diantai |
History | |
Call sign meaning | "Jiaotong" means traffic |
Links | |
Website | http://www.fm1039.com.cn/index/ |
Beijing Traffic Radio (Chinese: 北京交通广播) is Beijing's traffic station at 103.9 FM. It is one of the radio stations of the Radio Beijing Corporation. This particular channel mostly broadcasts commercials in Mandarin and traffic reports. The format of this channel can be compared to the traffic channels provided by XM Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio, the commercial all-traffic station CHMJ in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, or the "Highway Advisory radio stations" (the low power AM stations near points along Interstate highways in the United States).
The station has one million listeners and its staff view 80% of Beijing's roads from its headquarters at the Beijing Traffic Management Bureau headquarters.[1] It also has a network of retired volunteers with apartments at key junctions who are able to draw attention to major traffic problems.
The station also sponsors the largest leisure driving club in China, with 100 staff answering to club chief Chen Ming. The club offers members breakdown recovery services within the city's Fifth Ring Road, as well as organizing long-distance driving tours.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Liu Baijia (2008). "Road ahead looking clearer for Beijing's motorists". China Daily. April (26).
- ^ Ted Conover (2006-07-02). "Capitalist Roaders". The New York Times. July (2). Retrieved 2010-04-26.
External links
[edit]