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MOR My Only Radio (masa/contemporary MOR and OPM: ABS-CBN Corporation, stations shut down and migrated online) Radyo Patrol ( news / talk : ABS-CBN Corporation , stations shut down) WRocK (soft adult contemporary and OPM : ACWS-United Broadcasting Network , most stations sold to MBC and rebranded Easy Rock)
See also: List of radio stations in the Philippines § Stations by region or province The following is a list of NTC -licensed radio stations in Metro Manila, a region of the Philippines, current as of 2024. The tables can be sorted by call sign, branding, frequency, location, owner, languages and radio format. Also included below are defunct radio stations and Internet-only stations. Radio ...
DZBB (pronounced DZ-double-B; 594 AM) Super Radyo (transl. super radio) is a radio station owned and operated by GMA Network Inc. It serves as the flagship station of the Super Radyo network and one of the assets of GMA Radio and GMA Integrated News.
DZBB-AM: 594 kHz 50 kW Metro Manila: Super Radyo Dagupan [a] DZSD-AM 1548 kHz 10 kW Dagupan: Super Radyo Palawan DYSP-AM: 909 kHz 5 kW Puerto Princesa: Super Radyo Roxas [b] DYBB-AM 1503 kHz 5 kW Roxas: Super Radyo Iloilo DYSI-AM: 1323 kHz 10 kW Iloilo: Super Radyo Bacolod [b] DYSB-AM 1179 kHz 5 kW Bacolod: Super Radyo Cebu DYSS-AM: 999 kHz 10 ...
DWXI (1314 AM) is a radio station owned and operated by Delta Broadcasting System, the media arm of El Shaddai in the Philippines.The station's studio is located at the 7th Floor, Queensway Commercial Tower, 118 Amorsolo St., Legaspi Village, Makati, while its transmitter is located along Gen. Alvarez St., Brgy.
Over-the-air radio broadcasting in the Philippines mostly belongs to the AM and FM bands. The AM broadcast band in the Philippines is on 531–1701 kHz with 9 kHz spacing (530–1700 kHz with 10 kHz spacing from the American colonial era and post-independence up to 1978), and is predominantly used for news and public service broadcasting. The ...
During the Martial Law era, the National Media Production Center (NMPC) operated its own station Voice of the Philippines (VOP) on 2 frequencies: 920 kHz on AM, and 9.81 MHz on shortwave.
During Martial Law, the Bureau of Broadcasts took over the station and became DPI Radio 1 / MPI Radio 1. In November 1978, due to the switch of the Philippine AM dial from the NARBA-mandated 10 kHz spacing to the 9 kHz rule implemented by the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 , the station's frequency was transferred from 710 kHz to 918 kHz.