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Q Radio is a network of seven Independent Local Radio stations in Northern Ireland airing an adult contemporary format. The network is the fifth most listened to radio station in Northern Ireland, with a combined figure of 351,000 listeners as of December 2023, according to RAJAR .
Q Radio's newer transmitters both broadcast on 102.5 FM and deliver the station to areas previously sheltered by the Cavehill, such as North Belfast, Newtownabbey, Glengormley and Carrickfergus. Another transmitter also on 102.5 FM provides coverage for Bangor and North County Down.
Channel Q (stylized as CHANNEL Q) is an LGBT lifestyle talk and EDM top 40 radio network created, owned, and operated by Audacy, Inc. The network airs on the Audacy internet radio service, as well as on Audacy-owned terrestrial radio stations throughout the United States.
DWBM (105.1 FM), on-air as 105.1 Brigada News FM, is a radio station owned by Mareco Broadcasting Network and operated under an airtime lease agreement by Brigada Mass Media Corporation. It serves as a Luzon flagship station of the Brigada News FM Network.
All the new call signs ended in "Q", so the group became known as the Q Radio Network. In 1983, Jamieson sold the stations to CHUM Limited. During CHUM's ownership, the Q Radio stations became oldies stations, while a new co-owned country FM station, CKIX-FM, was launched.
CN also previously owned Belfast CityBeat until January 2015 when it was sold to the Q Radio Network. [6] [7] They also had a shareholding in Carlisle-based CFM Radio, holding a further stake in neighbouring Border Television.
Q Radio was an online, DAB and DTV radio station, broadcasting on digital television across the UK and online. The station launched in June 2008 as an alternative to the UK's rock and alternative stations, with a strong relationship with Q magazine . [ 1 ]
During the early 1980s, he bought the Q Radio network. [9] He subsequently obtained a controlling interest in Halifax Daily News in 1984, before buying CHTN-FM in Charlottetown two years later. [4] In a surprise move, he acquired the VOCM Radio Network during the late 1990s. [6] [9] He was succeeded as chairman of NCC by his son Rob in 2000. [10]