RTHK

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RTHK
Chinese香港電台
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXiānggǎng Diàntái
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationhēung góng dihn tòih
Jyutpinghoeng1 gong2 din6 toi4
Radio Television Hong Kong
Company typeTelevision and Radio Broadcasting
FoundedHong Kong Foundation
Headquarters30 Broadcast Drive, Kowloon, Hong Kong


Radio Television Hong Kong ( RTHK ) is a public broadcasting organisation in Hong Kong that is operated as an independent department in the government under the Broadcasting Authority. RTHK operates seven radio channels, and produces television programs that are then broadcast through the local television stations in Hong Kong. Headed by the Director of Broadcasting Mr. Chu Pui Hing (朱培慶), RTHK produces and broadcasts educational, entertainment and public affairs programmes. There have been debate of whether or not transform the station into a public corporation.

RTHK Broadcasting Building

History

In 1928, the Hong Kong Government took over radio broadcasting and launched the first broadcasts in June under the call-sign of GOW. A year later, the call sign was changed from GOW to ZBW. Mr. N. L. Smith, the then-Postmaster General, was appointed the first ever Head of Radio Broadcasting in Hong Kong. However, the first news bulletins were not broadcast until 1934. During the same year, a Chinese language channel was established under the call sign ZEK. Finally in 1948, the call-signs ZBW and ZEK were abandoned and replaced by the single name "Radio Hong Kong" (RHK) (香港廣播電台).

Broadcasting operations were taken over by the Government Information Services (GIS) in 1949. The same year, the station moved from Gloucester Building in Central District to the headquarters of Cable & Wireless, Electra House (later renamed Mercury House, also in Central and on the site of the present Ritz Carlton Hotel), where it took over the sixth and seventh floors as studios, offices and concert hall space. (As in most British colonies, Cable & Wireless provided the station's engineering, technical operations services, and transmissions, an arrangement that persisted until the 1990s.) In 1954, RHK was established as a department in its own right, becoming independent of GIS.

In 1960, RHK introduced VHF/FM transmissions of both its Chinese and English channels, operating from a single transmitting mast on Mount Gough overlooking Victoria Harbour.

Until 1966, the station was on-air only for three periods each day, morning, lunchtime, and evening partly because many of the broadcasters were part-time freelancers who had to fit their radio appearances into their normal daily working schedule.

In 1969 the station's medium wave AM transmitting station was moved from a waterfront site in Hung Hom to the summit of Golden Hill in the New Territories near Shatin. Although the new transmitters were much more powerful, the mountain-top site proved unsuitable for medium wave transmissions and reception in some areas has remained problematic ever since.

In March 1969 operations moved to new purpose-built studios, Broadcasting House (廣播大廈) at Broadcast Drive in Kowloon Tong. This building had originally been designed for a hillside site in Pokfulam on Hong Kong Island, but the new location was chosen as more secure for all the radio and television stations following the Cultural Revolution-inspired riots of 1967.

A Public Affairs Television Unit was established in 1970 to produce TV programmes that the independent commercial stations were -- and still are -- required to broadcast under the terms of their licences. RTHK has no television broadcast transmitters of its own.

RTHK was finally permitted to set up its own radio newsroom in 1973. Until then, all news was prepared by GIS staff. Until 1969 headlines were sent to the studios every half hour by teleprinter from the GIS headquarters in Central District, while the three daily full bulletins were delivered by hand by a messenger who carried them across Central District. This arrangement became impractical following the move to the new studios in 1969, so initially a GIS newsroom was set up in Broadcasting House. This arrangement also proved unsatisfactory and RHK's own journalists, who until then had been confined to producing magazine programmes, took over the entire news operation.

In 1976, the station's name was changed to "Radio Television Hong Kong" (RTHK) to reflect its new involvement in television programme production. In the same year, RTHK started to produce educational television programmes for schools after absorbing the previously independent Educational Television Unit. In 1986, RTHK TV headquarters moved across the road to the former Commercial Television studios, which were renamed Television House. The station's first News and Financial News channel, Radio 7, was established in November 1989. In 1994 the radio and television programmes were put online on the RTHK website.

Radio channels

RTHK operates seven radio channels:

Channel Modulation Frequency Language Features
RTHK Radio 1 FM (MHz) 92.6, 92.9, 93.2, 93.4, 93.5, 93.6, 94.4 Cantonese news, information, phone-in programmes, and general programming
RTHK Radio 2 FM (MHz) 94.8, 95.3, 95.6, 96.0, 96.3, 96.4, 96.9 Cantonese programmes aimed at youth, entertainment and popular music (Cantopop).
RTHK Radio 3 AM
FM
567, 1584 kHz
(MHz) 97.9, 106.8, 107.8
English news, popular music, information, and general programming. Similar in genre to BBC Radio 4
RTHK Radio 4 FM (MHz) 97.6, 97.8, 98.1, 98.2, 98.4, 98.7, 98.9 English (mainly) / Cantonese (some) classical music and fine arts
RTHK Radio 5 AM
FM
783 kHz
(MHz) 92.3, 99.4, 106.8
Cantonese (mainly) / Mandarin(Some) programming aimed at the elderly, also culture and education
RTHK Radio 6 AM 675 kHz English 24-hour BBC World Service relay
RTHK Putonghua AM
FM
621 kHz
(MHz) 100.9, 103.3
Putonghua (mainly, some Cantonese) general programming, news and finance

Radio programmes

RTHK produces public affairs radio programmes which are broadcast by Hong Kong's three commercial radio three FM channels and three AM channels,

Television programmes

RTHK produces public affairs television programmes which are broadcast by Hong Kong's three commercial television channels, TVB, ATV and Cable TV. These programmes include Hong Kong Connection (鏗鏘集), A Week in Politics (議事論事), Media Watch (傳媒春秋) and Police Call (警訊).

RTHK also produces TV drama, including the classic Below the Lion Rock (獅子山下).

RTHK does not operate its own television channel.

ETV

Main article: Educational Television

RTHK is responsible for producing programs for Educational Television (ETV) for primary and secondary students. ETV was first broadcasted in 1971 for Primary 3 students and was extended to Primary 6 students in 1974. In 1978, it had been extended to cover junior secondary (Form 1-Form 3) students.

While school programs covering the topics of English, Chinese, Mathematics and Putonghua are provided to both primary and secondary students, Science and Humanities programs are only provided for secondary school students and General Studies programs are only designed for primary students.

Since the need for instructional TV program declines with the development of the internet and other educational media, broadcasting of school ETV programs will be terminated in 2008.

There has been confusion between ETV and the ETV division of RTHK. Besides school ETV programs, the ETV division of RTHK produces many public education TV programs for general viewers, such as the Road Back (鐵窗邊緣), Anti-Drug Special (毒海浮生), Sex Education (性本善), Doctor and You (醫生與你).

Web site

The RTHK website, launched in 1994, is presented in English, Traditional Chinese and Simplified Chinese. All seven of RTHK's radio channels are broadcast live (slightly delayed) over the Internet. Program archives and news transcripts for the past year are also available. News is available for free via e-mail (or a PDA-downloadable version) three times a day. E-learning curricula for literature, arts, and languages are also provided.

RTHK service hotline

The RTHK Service Hotline (香港電台服務熱線) provides information via telephone at +852 22720000. The free hotline provides various services such as live relay of all RTHK channels and Legislative Council meetings, the recordings of news summary and news bulletins, leaving comments, etc..

Public concern over the independence of RTHK

RTHK enjoys editorial independence. Unlike some of the very well established and respected public broadcasters such as the BBC and NHK, which are primarily funded via a license fee system, RTHK is funded directly by an annual government allocation, and operates as a department of the government (similar to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). The concern is whether RTHK has enough editorial independence.

There was controversy in 2000 when then Chief Executive Tung Chee-Hwa admitted in a public statement that he hoped RTHK would help in sending out the government's messages. Even though this dealt a blow to RTHK's credibility, it has managed to retain its image as an independent news organisation reporting purely in the public's interest.

On other hand, there has been local argument whether RTHK should be corporatised. Proponents of the idea argued for RTHK to become an independent corporation, separate from the government, so that it could achieve more flexibility, and more cost-efficiency in its operation.

The ultimate concern is whether RTHK has enough editorial independence for a public broadcaster. One of the examples was the suspected intervention in RTHK's press freedom in July 1999. After inviting Cheng An-kuo (鄭安國), the highest representative of the "Taiwanese authority" in Hong Kong, to discuss the issue of the separation of China and Taiwan and Lee Teng-hui's "two states theory", RTHK was condemned by pro-mainland China critics. Then in October that year, the Head of Radio Broadcasting, Ms. Cheung Man Yee (張敏儀) was transferred to Japan as the Principal Hong Kong Economic and Trade Representative in Tokyo for no obvious reason.

However, there are cases where RTHK's editorial independence has been fully exemplified. There was one episode in Letter to Hong Kong (香港家書) (a programme in which important government officials read letters on Hong Kong matters on air to the public) was rescheduled for another more timely and newsworthy one. The switch had been made possible by a prompt editorial decision. Another case was a recent survey of the Hong Kong media conducted by the Chinese University of Hong Kong School of Journalism and Communication, which placed RTHK in first place amongst the electronic media in terms of credibility. RTHK achieved second place overall when all the local newspapers and magazines were included. [1]

See also

Template:Chinese Language Television Template:Chinese Language Radio