KZKZ (Philippines) explained

KZKZ
City:Manila, Philippines
Branding:KZKZ
Frequency:729 kHz
Format:Defunct
Power:five-watt transmitter (1922–1924), 100-watt transmitter (1924)
Owner:Henry Hermann (1922–1924)
Radio Corporation of the Philippines

KZKZ (729 kHz AM) was the second radio station in the Philippines. It began broadcasting in 1922 and was founded by Henry Hermann, the owner of the Electrical Supply Company in Manila. The station was upgraded in 1924 to a 100-watt station and its call letters, KZKZ, were adopted; at the time, stations in the Philippines carried U.S. call signs, though the United States Department of Commerce did not regulate them.[1] Later that year, the station was sold to the Radio Corporation of the Philippines.[2] Power was upgraded to 500 watts.

Radio Corporation of the Philippines merged with the Far Eastern Radio Corporation in September 1925. Far Eastern owned station KZRQ, which survived the merger while KZKZ was shuttered.[3] In 1926, the organization began work on constructing two of the largest radio stations in Asia with the idea of maintaining direct Manila-San Francisco service.[4]

External links

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Radio Reaches The Philippines: Rivals Fight for Control of Big Commercial Stations. April 8, 1925. 13. The Morning Post. Camden, New Jersey. Newspapers.com. October 13, 2022.
  2. News: Juan De La Cruz tunes in. Philippine Star/The Freeman. September 21, 2010.
  3. Philippine Radio: History & Problems. John A.. Lent. Asian Studies. 6. 1. 37–52. 1968.
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20110131214345/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,880868,00.html. January 31, 2011. Time. National Affairs: Praise. September 20, 1926.