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[10] and Usen (Music AirBee! and Sound Planet [11]). [12] In the education field, the Open University of Japan broadcast educational programming only on satellite TV (radio broadcasts and free-to-air TV broadcasts ended since October 2018 [7]).
NHK World-Japan: online news (text) and live video stream of the rolling news channel; NHK World Radio Japan: live radio streams, podcasts, and archive programming; Learn Japanese: re-edited versions of series, such as Basic Japanese for You and Brush Up Your Japanese. Only a limited number of programs are available online for free. [11]
NHK-FM (NHK-FM, Enueichikei-Efuemu) is a Japanese radio station operated by the public broadcaster, NHK.Its programming output, which consists of classical music, jazz, rock, Japanese pop music, folk, seven times of news bulletins and talk is broadly similar to the BBC's Radio 1, Radio 2 and Radio 3 in the United Kingdom and KBS Happy FM, KBS Classic FM and KBS Cool FM in South Korea.
In addition to NHK public radio, there are 48 AM and 51 FM stations in Japan divided between various private networks (Japan Radio Network and National Radio Network in AM, Japan FM Network, Japan FM League and MegaNet in FM). There is also a community radio circuit consisting of around 300 radio stations.
NHK World-Japan is composed of NHK World TV, NHK World Premium, and the shortwave radio service Radio Japan (RJ). World Radio Japan also makes some of its programs available on the Internet. NHK was the first broadcaster in the world to broadcast in high-definition (using multiple sub-Nyquist sampling encoding, also known as Hi-Vision) and in ...
Tokai TV, a quasi-key station in Nagoya, is related to the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper. TV Asahi Network/All-Nippon News Network (ANN) headed by TV Asahi. Affiliated with the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, which owns Nearly 25% of the station. In the Tokyo region, channel 5. TV Tokyo Network (TXN) headed by TV Tokyo. Owned by Nikkei, Inc.
Following the return of VHF channels 1 and 2 used for radar by the US military, the station moved to channel 2 on November 29, 1958. The vacant channel 4 frequency was taken by the Mainichi Broadcasting System (still New Japan Broadcasting until June 1959), whose television broadcasts started on March 1, 1959. NHK Educational Television started ...
The station had a large fanbase because of its unusual programming style, playing music non-stop except for jingles and breaks for news, traffic and weather. The law in Japan at that time stipulated that programming had to be maximum 80% music, and minimum 20% talk and continuity. J-WAVE coined the term "J-pop", which is only vaguely defined ...