Radiodifusión Nacional del Uruguay
Established2015
TypeGovernmental agency
HeadquartersMontevideo
FieldRadio broadcasting
Parent organization
Servicio de Comunicación Audiovisual Nacional
Websitemediospublicos.uy

Radiodifusión Nacional del Uruguay (RNU, "National Broadcasting of Uruguay") is the public radio broadcaster of the country of Uruguay. It operates four separate radio stations.

History

The first Uruguayan national broadcaster, SODRE (Official Radio Broadcasting Service), was inaugurated in 1929, and its first station, CX6 650 AM (now Radio Clásica), launched on 1 April 1930. Two additional AM services were added: CX26 1050 AM Radio Uruguay, a national speech station, and CX38 1290 AM Emisora del Sur, focused on music. They have since been joined by Babel, an instrumental music station.

As a result of a reorganization of public media in Uruguay, the new Servicio de Comunicación Audiovisual Nacional (National Audiovisual Communication Service) was created in 2015, unifying formerly separate radio, film, and television agencies.[1]

Services

In Montevideo, each of the four stations operates around the clock. Most of the rest of the country is served by a network of regional repeaters that primarily airs programs from Radio Uruguay.

Station Frequency Programming
Clásica 650 AM Classical music
Radio Uruguay 1050 AM/94.7 FM Talk
Radio Cultura 1290 AM National music
Babel 97.1 FM
100.9 FM (Maldonado)
Instrumental and world music

Repeater network

City Frequency Call sign
Artigas98.7 MHzCX254
Bella Unión100.1 MHzCX261B
Chuy93.5 MHzCX228
Colonia103.9 MHzCX280
Durazno105.1 MHzCX286
Florida96.1 MHzCX241A
Fray Bentos102.9 MHzCX275B
Melo106.9 MHzCX295
Mercedes92.1 MHzCX221
Minas106.1 MHzCX291A
Paso de los Toros106.1 MHzCX291
Paysandú103.5 MHzCX278A
Rivera93.9 MHzCX230
Rocha107.7 MHzCX299
Salto104.3 MHzCX282
San José95.1 MHzCX236D
Tacuarembó103.7 MHzCX279
Treinta y Tres92.7 MHzCX224

References

  1. Barrios, César (14 May 2020). "Más de 40 emisoras de radio y tv constituyen la estructura de los medios estatales" [More than 40 radio and TV stations make up the structure of state media]. La Mañana. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
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