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In 2004, The Times placed Premier Christian Radio at number one in a chart of the "most upmarket stations" based upon the percentage of its audience (81%) that is ABC1. [12] In the quarter ending June 2010 the station was receivable by 10,983,000 people; 143,000 listened, for an average of 12 hours each, 0.80% of all listening hours. [13]
TWR-UK (Trans World Radio) Christian Radio on Freeview 733, Freesat 790, Sky Channel 0128 website United Christian Broadcasters Talk Christian Radio on Sky Channel 0135 website United Christian Broadcasters UK Christian Radio on Sky Channel 0125 website
Pages in category "Christian radio stations in the United Kingdom" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Music station for UK Forces British Forces Broadcasting Service: 11A 786 0149 Boom Radio UK: Music station for over 55s Boom Radio Ltd 11A Also on local DAB+ in the Channel Islands: Capital UK: Current pop hits Global 11D / 12A 724 719 0109 958 Also on 95.8 FM in Greater London: Capital Anthems Pop Music Global 11A Capital Chill: Chilled beats ...
1.2.3.4 Miscellaneous and unclassified Christian radio stations. 1.2.3.4.1 United States. 1.2.3 ... largest religious network and America's most watched faith channel ...
In 2014, UCB began joint broadcasts on the Freeview TV channel of TBN UK, and launched the UCB Player app, which provides videos, podcasts and devotional content. In 2016 a second radio station, UCB 2, was launched on DAB radio. In 2019, UCB was distributing UCB Word For Today to over 400,000 readers in print and across digital platforms each ...
There are several UK-based radio stations that serve a genre group or locality, such as Cross Rhythms based in Stoke-on-Trent, a contemporary music station with a local FM community radio license. Branch FM operates across West Yorkshire and is a volunteer-run community Christian radio station. Like most other local Christian stations, they ...
TWR-UK was founded in 1963, at that time TWR-UK only broadcast programmes for a couple of hours each day. These were broadcast initially on shortwave from the much-loved Monte Carlo transmitter, [1] a transmitter formerly used to broadcast German war propaganda in the Second World War but later acquired by Trans World Radio in 1958. [2]