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The secondary studio for France Bleu Provence in Toulon. In addition to its headquarters in Aix-en-Provence, France Bleu Provence has offices for its reporters in Toulon and Marseille, on rue de l'Évêché. In the past, the station also had locations in Arles and Martigues during the 2000s. [1]
The station began operating as "Radio Vaucluse" on 29 June 1982, announced 4 days prior. [citation needed] Along with the regional stations, it was brought together on 4 September 2000, and was accordingly renamed "France Bleu Vaucluse" and on 6 January 2025, and was accordingly renamed "ici Vaucluse".
ici was created as France Bleu in 2000 by a fusion of two older Radio France networks, Les locales de Radio France and Radio Bleue. The flagship station in Paris goes by the name of ici Paris Île-de-France, while the individual stations are each named for their respective coverage areas, usually a département, région, or city.
Pages in category "Radio stations in France" The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total. ... France Bleu Provence; France Bleu RCFM; France Bleu ...
Francestar FM, France's Hit Music Station...!! FRANCESTAR MEDIA! France Vivace, from the Radio France group; Frequence 3, a Web Radio from Paris; Plasm, a web radio from an independent group; Berceuses, a web radio broadcasting lullabies. It is also available to download on the App Store.
In 1999 Jean-Marie Cavada, the president of Radio France launched a restructuring called "Plan Bleu", which reassigned frequencies among local stations, Radio Bleue, Urgences, Le Mouv', and FIP. FIP lost the stations which had smaller audiences: the stations at Metz and Nice became part of the France Bleu network. Despite listener protests, the ...
France Info was founded in 1987 by Roland Faure and Jérôme Bellay. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Year on year its audience has grown, notably after the social conflicts of 1995, 2003, and 2006. It is frequently estimated to be the fourth largest French radio network in terms of listener numbers, after RTL , NRJ and France Inter .
The consultation for this closed in May 2012 and the technical decree was released 16 August 2013, including DAB+ to the list of permitted standards. At the end of 2007, France's Government announced that the official standard for digital radio in France would be DMB-A, to be marketed as Radio Numérique Terrestre (RNT).