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NHK World Radio Japan (RJ) is the international radio arm of NHK. It broadcasts a weekly lineup of news, current affairs, cultural, and educative radio program focusing on Japan and Asia, for a daily total of 65 hours of broadcasts. Radio Japan provides two main feeds: The General Service broadcasts worldwide in Japanese and English.
The listed stations with ★ signs also broadcast television. Many stations have multiple frequencies . Certain AM-only radio stations (or AM stations with limited FM simulcast coverage) will be broadcasting solely in FM by 2028. [3] The switch will not affect Hokkaido and Akita Prefectures and will continue AM-FM radio simulcasts.
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-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.
J-Wave is a commercial radio station based in Tokyo, Japan, broadcasting on 81.3 FM from the Tokyo Skytree to the Tokyo area. J-Wave airs mostly music, including J-pop, C-pop and Western music, covering a wide range of formats.
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NHK AM (NHKラジオ第1放送, NHK Rajio Dai-ichi Hōsō) is Japan's oldest radio station operated by the public broadcaster, NHK.Its programming output, which consists of news, current affairs, and information is broadly similar to the BBC's Radio 4 in the United Kingdom, National Public Radio in the United States, CBC Radio One in Canada and Deutschlandfunk in Germany.
On August 20, 1926, the three existing radio stations (Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka) were merged, laying ground for the current NHK. Broadcasting moved to a definitive location on December 1, from Uehonmachi Hall. The station broadcast the first radio calisthenics broadcast on August 1, 1928, before the rest of the country. [7]