ZIZ explained

ZIZ
Type:National broadcaster
Dissolved:ca. 1940 (shortwave)[1]
Tvstations:Channel 5[2]
Radiostations:95.9, 96.1, 96.3, and 96.9 FM
Former Callsigns:VP2LO (shortwave, 1935–1939)
Headquarters:Basseterre
Country:Saint Kitts and Nevis
Owner:Government of Saint Kitts and Nevis

ZIZ Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC), commonly referred to as ZIZ, is the national broadcasting service of Saint Kitts and Nevis in the West Indies. Originating in 1935 as the shortwave station VP2LO, it adopted its present-day callsign in 1939 but went off the air shortly after; it relaunched on the AM format in 1961, and expanded to television in 1972. A government-owned service and a member of the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC), ZIZ carries its programming across four FM frequencies and one TV channel; the AM outlet remained in operation as late as the 2010s.

History

ZIZ is a government-owned national commercial broadcaster,[3] and is also a member of the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC).

Broadcasting in Saint Kitts was introduced with VP2KM, an amateur radio outlet owned by Kenneth Mallalieu, in 1934. VP2KM was succeeded in 1935 by VP2LO, a shortwave station which was also the first commercial radio service in the territory. Airing on 6380 kc.[4] from the town of Basseterre, VP2LO began with 150 watts of transmission power, which was later increased to 500.[4] It was headed by Administrator D.R. Stewart and launched by two sons of his, and was "operated by the ICA Radio Sales & Service Laboratories in conjunction with the Caribbean Broadcasting Service".[4] It adopted the new call sign of ZIZ on 21 January 1939,[5] but sometime after Stewart's death the following month, the original station went off the air.

The service returned to the airwaves as an AM outlet on 5 March 1961, serving what was then Saint Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla. Headquartered in the Springfield neighbourhood of Basseterre, it was relaunched with £23,000 in Colonial Development and Welfare funds from 1959, plus an EC$1.25 million loan from Cable & Wireless, under the presence of West Indies Federation Governor-General Lord Hailes. Initially carrying a three-hour evening schedule,[6] the revived ZIZ transitioned to airing across two separate sessions (6:45–10:00 ECT in the morning, and 6:00–10:00 ECT at night) some three years later.[6] The lineup consisted of local shows and imported BBC material; with special programming, a broadcast day could run up to 15 hours. An eponymous 1962 song by The Mighty Saint, a local calypsonian, commemorated the relaunch. Its overnight success was noted by the West India Committee over the next two years:

Although the revived ZIZ started out as a public service, it would soon switch to a revenue-based commercial format to keep itself on air, a move that "was received with very great regret by many people" in early 1963 according to the Committee. By 1979, its power and daily schedule had respectively expanded to 20 kilowatts (up from 660 watts in earlier years) and 17 hours of programming. In 1984, 60% of ZIZ's schedule was music-oriented; 35% of that amount came from the Caribbean, and the remainder from the U.S. and Europe.[7]

ZIZ launched a television division on 3 December 1972; during that decade, it operated one transmitter and four translators across the territory. Throughout the mid-1980s, the station aired 5½ hours of programming every weeknight,[8] and ran a separate telex-based information channel on the island country's newly established cable system.[7] In 2001, its lineup aired from 4:00 till 11:00 p.m., switching to Fox Family programming during off hours; in Nevis, the 7:00–11:00 portion carried material from that island's Information Service. As of 2006, ZIZ was Saint Kitts and Nevis' sole national television channel.[9]

Foreign programming accounted for 90% of ZIZ Television's offerings in 1975; with regards to U.S. content, this figure became 60–65% in the 1980s. Around the turn of the 21st century, the local political opposition saw the station as a government, and accused it of denying them airtime.[10]

Availability

ZIZ's radio programming is broadcast across four FM frequencies: 95.9, 96.1, 96.3, and 96.9.[2] The AM feed began transmission on 570 kHz in the 1960s, and was also heard during that period across the British Leeward Islands as well as the neighbouring French and Dutch territories. It later moved to 555 kHz, and remained there as late as the 2010s.[11] The television service, which airs on channel 5,[2] served the entire Leeward archipelago in the 1970s and was included in the mid-1984 launch of the national cable system.[7] In 1989, it was received on channel 9 in northern St. Kitts Island and channel 13 in Nevis.[12]

See also

References

General

Specific

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Pardee . Mike . On the Air Waves: Short-Wave Shorts — May 8 . 2024-10-09 . . 1940-05-08 . . 11 . limited . Newspapers.com.
  2. News: Prime Minister Dr. Drew to Address the United Nations General Assembly on Friday, September 27, 2024 . 2024-10-05 . The Labour Spokesman . 2024-09-27 . 27 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240927212810/https://thelabourspokesman.com/prime-minister-dr-drew-to-address-the-united-nations-general-assembly-on-friday-september-27-2024/ . live .
  3. News: St Kitts and Nevis country profile. 14 September 2012. 2024-10-05. BBC News. 15 October 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20071015220221/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/country_profiles/1202982.stm#media. live.
  4. Book: Berg . Jerome S. . The Early Shortwave Stations: A Broadcasting History Through 1945 . 2013-10-04 . . 978-0-7864-7411-0 . 176 . https://google.com/books/edition/The_Early_Shortwave_Stations/XSWXAAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Caribbean+broadcasting+call+signs&pg=PA176&printsec=frontcover . 2024-10-04 . Chapter 3: 1938 . limited . Google Books.
  5. News: Clarke . H. Thursten . The DX Column: Where VP2LO Went . 2024-10-04 . . 1939-01-21 . 6 . Bermuda National Library Digital Collection.
  6. From Our Mailbag: St Kitts: Government broadcasting station . Chronicle of the West India Committee . March 1964 . 153 . . 0043-3152.
  7. Book: Lent . John A. . Mass Communications in the Caribbean . 1990 . Iowa State University Press . 0-8138-1182-1 . https://archive.org/details/masscommunicatio00lent/page/46/mode/2up?q=ZIZ . 2024-10-06 . U.S. Broadcast Programming Use in the Small Islands . registration . Archive.org.
  8. Book: TV & Cable Factbook . International TV Directory: St. Kitts . 1386 . 52 . 0732-8648 . 1984 . 1 May 2024 . Television Digest, Inc. . World Radio History.
  9. News: Bailey . Chauncey . St. Kitts Music Festival Brings Talent to Thousands . 2024-10-05 . . 2006-07-12 . 2, 7 . registration . ProQuest.
  10. Book: Veenendaal . Wouter . Politics and Democracy in Microstates . 2015 . 17 October 2014 . . 978-1-317-64657-0 . pos. 148 . https://google.com/books/edition/Politics_and_Democracy_in_Microstates/cIbZBAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=ZIZ+St.+Kitts&pg=PT148&printsec=frontcover . 2024-10-05 . The Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis: politics or politricks? . limited . . 5 October 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20241005060005/https://www.google.com/books/edition/Politics_and_Democracy_in_Microstates/cIbZBAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=ZIZ+St.+Kitts&pg=PT148&printsec=frontcover . live .
  11. Jordan . Brandon . DX Worldwide — East: Pan-American DX . DX Monitor . 2010-10-23 . 48 . 7 . 9 . 1514 . International Radio Club of America (IRCA) . . 0899-9732 . World Radio History . 5 October 2024 . 5 October 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20241005060003/https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-DX/IRCA-DXM/DXM-Vol-48/DXM_Vol_48_No_07.pdf#page=5 . live .
  12. Book: Meditz . Sandra W. . Hanratty . Dennis M. . Islands of the Commonwealth Caribbean: A Regional Study . 1989 . Area Handbook Series . . 472 . https://archive.org/details/islandsofcommonw00medi/page/472/mode/2up?ref=ol&view=theater&q=ZIZ . 2024-10-06 . 88-600483 . St. Christopher and Nevis: Economy: Role of Government . Archive.org.