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Zagreb County: Obiteljski radio Ivanić 99.4 Town of Ivanić Grad: Zabavni Radio 90.3 101.8 Wider area of Dugo Selo: Radio Jaska 93.8 Town of Jastrebarsko: Radio Samobor 93.0 Town of Samobor: Radio Sveta Nedelja 97.7 Town of Sveta Nedelja: Radio Zelina 92.9 Town of Sveti Ivan Zelina: Gold FM 94.9 Wide area of Velika Gorica: Radio Vrbovec 94.5 ...
The beginning of Croatian radio date back to 1926, when the broadcasting of Radio Zagreb began. It was founded by the Radio Club Zagreb which was made up of more than 130 distinguished radio amateurs and businessmen from Zagreb and other parts of Croatia led by the Croatian physicist Oton Kučera. It was the first radio station in all of ...
Croatian Radiotelevision is the direct successor of Radio Station Zagreb (Radio stanica Zagreb) that started broadcasting on 15 May 1926, the first radio station to broadcast in the Balkans. [3] The station was initially a private company, before Radio Zagreb was nationalized on 1 May 1940.
Radio 101 is a Croatian independent radio station which broadcast alternative and contemporary music, as well as breaking news. It is operating in Zagreb and had a regional license for the City of Zagreb and the Zagreb County. [1] In its heyday, the station had an audience of about 1.2 million.
bravo! is a Croatian radio station broadcast nationally. Founded as Narodni radio, it was the most listened-to radio station in the country in 2014. [1] As of 2011, it was one of three radio stations with national concessions, along with Otvoreni Radio and Croatian Catholic Radio.
Radio Student (100.5 MHz FM) is the first student radio station in Croatia, broadcasting since 1996 in Zagreb. The station is non-profit, non-commercial serving as an educational radio for students of Zagreb University. It is located at the Faculty of Political Sciences, which is licensed to broadcast to a part of the city of Zagreb. [1]
In May 1990, following Franjo Tuđman's election victory, he and his ruling Croatian Democratic Union party began a takeover of radio and television stations in Croatia. In June 1990, the Parliament of Croatia renamed the country's national broadcaster from Radio Television Zagreb (Croatian: Radiotelevizija Zagreb) to Croatian Radiotelevision (Croatian: Hrvatska radiotelevizija).
Television Zagreb set up its studio in Šubićeva Street in 1962 [2] The Zagreb TV centre became a member of the Yugoslav Radio Television (JRT) (an umbrella organization of television stations in Yugoslavia), acting as Eurovision Technical Centre for the JRT. In 1972, Television Zagreb began broadcasting of its second channel, and switched to ...