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RTHK Putonghua Channel: AM FM (kHz) 621 (Golden Hill) (MHz) 100.9 (Happy Valley, Causeway Bay, Wan Chai, Tuen Mun North), 103.3 (Tseung Kwan O, Tin Shui Wai) Mandarin (primary) / other languages (secondary) News and finance, Community Involvement Broadcasting Service (CIBS) (community radio) [25] China National Radio Voice of Hong Kong Channel: AM
RTHK Radio 6 (AM 675 kHz) (24-hour relay of China National Radio) RTHK Putonghua Channel (AM 621 kHz, FM 100.9 MHz Causeway Bay, Wan Chai, Tuen Mun, FM 103.3 MHz Tseung Kwan O, Tin Shui Wai) RTHK Radio The Greater Bay (FM 102.8 MHz) Commercial radio stations: Commercial Radio. Supercharged 881 (FM 88.1 MHz - 89.5 MHz)
NBT World (owner by National News Bureau of Thailand and since 2022 to present broadcast only on Internet TV [29]) Bangkok Broadcasting & Television Company Limited Channel 7 (7 HD) Ministry of Education (through the Department of Learning Encouragement)
RTHK Radio 3 (Chinese: 香港電台第三台; Jyutping: hoeng1gong2 din6toi4 dai6saam1 toi4) is a broadcasting station under Radio Television Hong Kong. It was launched on 30 June 1928 and is the first radio broadcast station in Hong Kong .
In 1999, Pang earned a main character role in the 32-episode Radio RTHK historical drama The Book and the Sword. She became noted for her vocal changes in taking on a character and was sought by dubbing studios and for commercial advertisements. Pang made appearances on RTHK's Teen Power coaching prospective DJs on how to use vocal changes to ...
The Chinese language newspapers Headline Daily and Oriental Daily News have the highest shares in the Hong Kong newspaper market, while the Hong Kong Economic Times is the best-selling financial newspaper. The Standard, a free tabloid
Pearl News Magazine 國際視線; Finance Magazine 財經透視 (TVB Jade) Money Magazine 財經雜誌 - Hong Kong and world financial news report outlook (TVB Pearl) Sunday Report 星期日檔案 - features stories from Chinese and Hong Kong societies affecting people today; News Magazine 新聞透視 - Hong Kong political news round table
Beijing made Mandarin (known in China as Putonghua) the nation's sole official language in 1982, leading to bans on other languages at many radio and television stations. [3] This status was confirmed by the Law of the People's Republic of China on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language, which went into effect on January 1, 2001.