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The Cork Independent is a free newspaper in Cork, Ireland.The paper is published weekly and contains local news, health and beauty, business, opinion, social events, entertainment, motoring and property as well as input from a number of columnists.
Cork Safety Alerts is a digital news source based in Cork, Ireland. The volunteer run team collates and publishes general updates on traffic, travel and other non-editorialised news local to Cork. The Cork Safety Alerts team consists of 5 volunteer administrators. [1]
East Cork Journal [73] – launched September 2007. Ceased publication in 2020 during pandemic lockdown. The East Cork News – discontinued in 1991 after several years, was a sister publication of the Waterford News and Star (owned by Examiner/TCH) The East Cork Post – short-lived Youghal based newspaper in the mid-1980s; The East Galway ...
There are also local stations such as Cork's 96FM, Cork's Red FM, C103, CUH 102.0FM, UCC 98.3FM (formerly Cork Campus Radio 97.4fm) [61] and Christian radio station Life 93.1FM. [62] Cork also has a temporary licensed citywide community station 'Cork City Community Radio' on 100.5FM, which is on-air on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays only.
Cork's RedFM is an Irish radio station which broadcasts to Cork and the surrounding area, and is aimed at a youth audience. The station commenced broadcasting on 16 January 2002 [2]" and was awarded Ireland's first youth radio licence. Its target market is the 15-35 age group in Cork city and county.
News bulletins from the Cork newsroom are broadcast from 6:30am to 7pm (weekends from 8am to 6pm) with news bulletins from Bauer Media Audio Ireland outside these times. Bulletins run for five or six minutes throughout the day, and the 10am, 11am, 12pm and the flagship 6pm bulletin runs for ten minutes. [citation needed]
Echo Boy statue, Cork City Echo seller with distinctive cry. The Evening Echo was first published in 1892. [9] It was launched as an evening paper by Thomas Crosbie, then proprietor of the Cork Examiner. Crosbie had himself joined the Examiner in 1841, taking over as editor—and later owner—after the death of founder John Francis Maguire in ...
An election to all 31 seats on Cork City Council was held on 7 June 2024 as part of the 2024 Irish local elections. [1] Cork is divided into 5 local electoral areas (LEAs) to elect councillors for a five-year term of office on the electoral system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote (PR-STV).