Radio History

How times have changed? Just come in and make an appointment with the manager to give feedback.

Sounds like a great station… Even with so much effort and focus it didn’t last.

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I think the format was uncharitably described as ‘Tragic 11’ by many in radio circles at the time. I suppose they were comparing it to the true halcyon days of UW in the 60s, much like how we lament what 2SM has become. The fall probably wasn’t as great as a Caralis-induced nuclear warhead, though.

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I don’t think it made it to that recording but Magic 11 was unusual with “News at 55” ie 5 minutes before the hour.

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The only names from Magic 11 I saw from that list that I know off is Trevor Sinclair (2ue/4bh Breakfast) and Tim Webster (2ch Breakfast)

Magic 11 gave away a lot of money compared to the current Magic station Magic 1278 which is a shame

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Yeah they did. Interesting. I think from my prospective. how they took aspects of a radio station so seriously like the news service and the “DJs”. There are remnants today of this with Ace but nothing compared to the good old days. I could feel more money was spent. Even if listener feedback was still “70% show” , example the management would not cater for one person who wants more album heavy rock for example.

I am old enough to remember the new services these stations had in the 80s. Its something I really miss. It really faded out in the 90s.

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Where exactly was Brisbane’s Radio House? And what building is now at the present location?

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On the corner of Elizabeth and Edward St

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From The Radio Vault, a montage of 4KQ jingles from the 90s (I know it says the Late 1980’s in the heading, but it mentions the 90s on many of its jingles).

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How long has that news theme been used on 4KQ?

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Not sure exactly but a very long time.

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1987 apparently

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2SM stopped playing the hit hits in 1988. So did Stereo 10. 3XY ended the rock in 1991.

There was no internet back then so gauging the sadness of the public was difficult.

Suffice to say that none of those stations was rating above a ten and these were the days of fewer commercial licences in each city.

From reading this thread I can see that Brisbane is going to lose something that very special to so many people in Brisbane. 4KQ seems to be an anomaly in regard to capital city radio stations.

4KQ had some fun with its playlist and the slogan “good times” was meaningful.

It seems to me that many of 4KQ’s listeners may not find another frequency, they may listen to the radio less in the future.

I wish we had this kind of “quirky” radio in Sydney. All we have is radio stations that share their music logs with other stations thousands of kilometres away.

I hope Brisbane enjoys the last 24 hours of “real radio”. I suspect the good times are coming to an end and it sounds like the weekends will never be the same.

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I reckon you need to give community radio a go. SWR FM offers a reasonably consistent format, and there are probably other shows and stations that you would enjoy. And my show is certainly ‘quirky’ enough for most people’s tastes :slight_smile:

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I will give it a go!

3XY was more XY Easy Rock from 1988 as well… they even ran the same TV ads as Lite N Easy 1269/1008.

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From The Radio Vault, 4KQ News Opener & Station ID from April 1996.

That aircheck was recorded on the Gold Coast, from when the station was transmitting out of St Helena Island.

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Documentary broadcast today celebrating 90 years of ABC Radio

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Also on Tuned In — 90 Years of ABC Radio - ABC listen

Sydney had their own thing taking the place of Thank God It’s Friday Thank God It's the ABC! - ABC listen

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A fairly niche milestone passed us by this weekend – 30 years since the launch of 3EE at 7.00am on 3 July 1992.

The station was meant to launch a week earlier but was postponed at the last minute due to technical equipment delays.

The station of course was the relaunch of the former 3XY licence but owner AWA had to basically build 3EE from scratch, including new studios and transmitter in Melbourne.

3EE’s initial format “The Breeze” was a hybrid talk, lifestyle, football and easy listening/jazz music format that was terribly short-lived on the back of abysmal ratings. The debut survey (7/92) scored a mere 0.7 and over the coming months it didn’t get any higher than 1.2 before AWA sold it to Wesgo (which already owned 3MP) in mid-1993.

3MP then shutdown 3EE’s programming and turned the station into a simulcast of 3MP. This was until the ABA instructed 3MP to restore a separate program on 3EE, which ultimately launched as Magic 693 in March 1994, playing music from the '40s, '50s and '60s with AFL broadcasts on weekends.

Eventually, Magic 693 cannibalised 3MP’s audience, to the point that it soon became the dominant of the 2 stations.

Southern Cross Broadcasting then bought 3MP and 3EE, but as it already owned 3AW and 3AK it decided to keep 3AW and 3EE and sell off 3MP and 3AK.

In 2006, 3EE and 3AW swapped frequencies, with 3EE becoming Magic 1278. Then it became Talking Lifestyle and Macquarie Sports Radio before re-instating the Magic brand in 2020.

Source: The Age Green Guide

YouTube: THE HEHR ARCHIVE

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I wonder why it was on 693 and not 1422?

Was 1422 already reissued as a HPON by then?