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[3] [4] [5] Nippon Broadcasting System is also the home of the long-running radio program All Night Nippon. From July 15, 1954, to September 30, 1967, the station used the abbreviation "NBS" derived from Nippon Broadcasting System. Since October 1, 1967, it has used the call sign JOLF and identified itself with the last two letters "LF".
The Fujisankei Communications Group was created in 1967 as part of an agreement between the radio stations Nippon Broadcasting System, Inc. and Nippon Cultural Broadcasting, Inc., the television broadcaster Fuji Television Network, Inc. [N.B. 1] and the newspaper Sankei Shimbun Co., Ltd. [5] [6] This media conglomerate was founded by Nobutaka Shikanai. [7] "
15 July – The Nippon Broadcasting System initiates its first official regular broadcasting service in Tokyo, Japan. 18 October – Texas Instruments announces the development of the first commercial transistor radio. The Regency TR-1 goes on sale the following month.
The four largest of these – Nippon TV (NNN/NNS), Tokyo Broadcasting System , Fuji TV (FNN/FNS), and TV Asahi , two of four of them owned by major newspapers (Nippon TV by The Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings and TV Asahi by The Asahi Shimbun Company) and Tokyo Broadcasting System being highly affiliated with The Mainichi Newspapers Co. despite the ...
Fuji Television Network Inc. was founded in 1957 by Nobutaka Shikanai and Shigeo Mizuno, presidents of Nippon Broadcasting System and Nippon Cultural Broadcasting respectively. [7] On January 10, 1959, Fuji TV began a trial broadcast.
National Radio Network (NRN)—Flagship Stations: Nippon Cultural Broadcasting (文化放送) and Nippon Broadcasting System (ニッポン放送) Radio Nikkei is an independent shortwave station broadcasts nationwide with two services.
30 September: Radio Ceylon becomes the Ceylon Broadcasting Corporation. 31 October: WNEW-FM in New York City adopts a progressive rock format, the first station to do so in the Metromedia chain. 7 November: The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 leads to the start of National Public Radio in the United States.
The New Japan Broadcasting System, Inc. (新日本放送株式会社, Shin-Nippon Hōsō Kabushiki-gaisha, NJB) was founded on December 27, 1950.. After the end of World War II , Mainichi Shimbun intended to establish a private radio station, and the establishment of the radio station was placed in charge of the then editor-in-chief, Shinzo Takahashi.