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Radio Jamaica, also known as RJR 94 FM, and formerly Real Jamaican Radio, is a broadcast company in Jamaica with headquarters in Kingston. History [ edit ] On 9 July 1950, a commercial license to operate as a subsidiary of the British Rediffusion Group was issued to the Radio Jamaica and Rediffusion Network.
The television and the Radio 2 assets were sold to the Radio Jamaica Limited (RJR) for J$70M, and the former JBC television channel was replaced by the commercial station Television Jamaica. The Radio 1 studios and licence were retained by the government but fell into disrepair.
RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll: 1,015 22 25: 18 35 3: 17 – 26 February 2023 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll: 1,002 27.9 28.1: 19 25 0.2: 13 September 2022 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll - 31: 18 17 34 13: 22 September 2021 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll: 1,003 26: 15 26 31 11: 3 September 2020 2020 general election – 57.1 ...
News, Talk RJR 94 FM: 94.1- 94.7 MHz: Talk, News, Caribbean Music, Reggae Music Fame FM: 95.7 MHz: ... Listen online radios of Jamaica; Lists of radio stations in Africa;
Ralston McKenzie is a Jamaican broadcaster [1] and journalist, producer/presenter of the award-winning community service programme Sunday Contact. The show, on for decades, aired weekly on RJR 94 FM (Radio Jamaica) and the Internet, linking persons with long-lost family and friends. He has set up Jamaica Contact, a web-based extension of his ...
RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll – 37: 25 38 12: 21–23 August 2020 Jamaica Observer/Bill Johnson poll: 1,000 37: 23 40 14: 20 July–6 August 2020 Nationwide News Network/Bluedot poll – 52: 34 14 18: 23 July–3 August 2020 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll – 36: 20 44 16: 9–12 July 2020 Jamaica Observer/Bill Johnson poll: 1,200 ...
Recorded earlier Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is addressing the Libertarian National Convention in Washington, D.C., on Friday afternoon. Although Kennedy indicated ...
Wilmot Perkins began his radio career hosting the program What's your Grouse on RJR in 1960. He then took a break from the airwaves a few years later to go into farming, but returned to radio in the 1970s, as host of Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation 's (JBC) popular call-in program Public Eye. He later hosted Hot Line on RJR and then Straight ...