LaZ101 es una de la radio dominicana ms populares debido a los diferentes programas que con el tiempo han aumentado el rating de esta estacin. La Z se transmite en Frecuencia Modulada (FM) por los 101.3 en Santo Domingo.
Escucha la z101 en vivo, una de las emisoras de radio dominicanas, que se caracteriza por la variedad de programas polticos, de economa, salud, culturales y de opinin, as como por su formato de ofrecer las noticias y la espontaneidad de los programas de opinin.
La Z, propiedad de Bienvenido Rodrguez, cuenta con un equipo de destacados profesionales de la comunicacin entre los que estn: Domingo Pez, Consuelo Despradel, Cundo Camarena, Willy Rodrguez, entre otros.
El Gobierno de la Maana es el programa radial ms destacado del pas, se transmite de lunes a viernes de 5:00 a 11:00 am. Se caracteriza por brindar informaciones de una manera jocosa a travs de hechos noticiosos, comentarios y opiniones.
CFLZ-FM (101.1 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada, serving the Niagara Region and the Buffalo-Niagara Falls metropolitan area. It is owned by Byrnes Communications and it broadcasts an adult hits format, known as 101.1 More FM. CFLZ's studios and offices are on Ontario Avenue in Niagara Falls.
The station was launched on July 1 (Canada Day), 1986, at 5:30 p.m. as AM 530 CJFT, playing a Top 40 format. Afternoon drive personality Alan Chonka signed CJFT on the air.[2] It moved to FM in 1991, adopted the CKEY-FM call letters, and flipped to adult standards.[3] (from 1945 to 1991, CKEY was the callsign of an AM radio station in Toronto, which now airs Chinese programming as Fairchild Radio affiliate CHKT.)
On August 26, 1994, at noon, the station switched to alternative rock as FM 101 The Planet. By 1996, the station shifted to dance music (similar to CING-FM in nearby Hamilton) while retaining the "Planet" moniker. It was an affiliate of "Pirate Radio" with Chris Sheppard.
On August 21, 1996, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved CJRN 710 Inc.'s application to increase CKEY-FM transmitter from 8,670 watts to 19,700 watts. The Commission also approved the application to amend the broadcasting licence for CKEY-FM by authorizing the licensee to add a transmitter at St. Catharines, operating on frequency 101.1 MHz (channel 266A) with an effective radiated power of 150 watts with a callsign CKEY-FM-1. The Commission notes that this transmitter has been operating on an experimental basis for some time and is a co-channel, synchronous repeater of CKEY-FM Fort Erie.[4]
On November 14, 1997, the dance format was dropped in favour of a modern AC format (which later shifted to Hot AC), branded as The River. In 2001, a change of ownership of CJRN, CKEY-FM and CFLZ-FM to the Niagara Broadcasting Corporation was approved. The company would now be owned by several members of the Dancy family.[5] On September 6, 2002, at 6 am, the Hot AC format moved to sister station CFLZ-FM, and CKEY adopted a Rhythmic Top 40 format branded as WiLD 101
The station had a joint sales agreement (JSA) with the U.S.-based radio broadcaster Citadel Broadcasting, under which the company handled advertising sales for CKEY-FM alongside its Buffalo, New York stations, in exchange for a share of the revenue. An intervention against the renewal of CKEY-FM's licence was filed by a representative of a competing station in Buffalo, who accused the station of being programmed by Citadel in violation of CRTC regulations (which require all broadcast undertakings to be "operated in fact by the licensee itself"). CKEY-FM stated that it did contract some of Citadel's Buffalo personnel to produce programming overseen by its local staff, and denied that Citadel had assumed all of the station's operations.[6][7]
The CRTC found that the JSA was in fact limited to advertising sales services paid for by the station, and that Citadel was not outright operating the station. However, the CRTC did take issue with the amount of locally-oriented news and information that the station was broadcasting.[6][7]
By 2005, the station moved to its current Top 40 format, and later on, the station changed its branding to Z101 on April 1, 2007. It was the only "Wild"-branded station in Canada. On December 19, 2005, the CRTC approved the transfer of ownership and control of CJRN 710 Inc. (CJRN Niagara Falls, CKEY-FM Fort Erie and CKEY-FM-1 St. Catharines) from Niagara Broadcasting Corp. (controlled by David Dancy) to Northguard Capital Corp. (owned and controlled by Andrew Ferri). This approval also covered the transfer to Northguard of 788813 Ontario Inc. (CFLZ-FM Niagara Falls), once it became a wholly owned subsidiary of CJRN 710 Inc. Northguard would then amalgamate both entities to continue the operation of the undertakings under the name, CJRN 710 Inc. 2005-1146-1 (December 19, 2005)[8][9]
The CRTC has continued to express concern with CKEY's programming, calling attention in particular to the station's seeming failure to comply with its licence condition requiring a minimum three hours per week of locally oriented news programming. In its 2007 licence renewal, the station was only granted a two-year licence period.[10]
CKEY was a reporter to the American Rhythmic Top 40 panel on Mediabase and Nielsen BDS (and also reported on the Canadian top 40 panel on Nielsen BDS), but in 2005, CKEY-FM moved to the American Top 40 panel on Mediabase and Nielsen BDS. The station has continued to lean rhythmic even after shifting to mainstream top 40. Another station, CKBT-FM in Kitchener (which debuted as Rhythmic Top 40 in 2004, only to go top 40 in 2007), retains the rhythmic lean. Just like similar stations CIDC-FM-Toronto and CKHZ-FM-Halifax, the station pronounces it "Zee" instead of "Zed". In the case of CFLZ, the station is most likely using the American pronunciation due to the station primarily serving Buffalo at this time (but would later shift its focus to the Niagara Region).[citation needed]
On August 24, 2011, the station dropped the rhythmic lean entirely and adopted a more mainstream playlist. The station also unveiled a new logo, and will continue to report as CHR per Mediabase and Nielsen BDS. As of November 2011, CKEY was moved to the Mediabase Canadian CHR panel from the U.S. CHR panel as it still reports as a Buffalo station, but it must register as a St. Catharines station.
In late 2011, the station adopted the CFLZ-FM callsign which had been used by its sister station, now known as CJED-FM. As the station's signal has always targeted the Buffalo market and does not fully cover the Niagara Region, the station applied to the CRTC and received approval to deploy a co-channel repeater (CFLZ-FM-1) that is located in south St. Catharines.
On April 23, 2012, Vista Broadcast Group, which owns a number of radio stations in western Canada, announced an agreement to acquire the station and CJED-FM from Haliburton Broadcasting, in cooperation with Westerkirk Capital.[15] The transaction was approved by the CRTC on October 19, 2012.[16]
On September 20, 2013, at noon, after playing "This Is What It Feels Like" by Armin van Buuren, CFLZ shifted its brand to the 2Day FM brand, simulcasting with sister station CJED-FM. The first song on "2Day" was "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke.
On April 30, 2014, Vista filed an application with the CRTC to amend the station's broadcasting licence.[17] On December 8, 2014, the CRTC denied the application and cited Vista for being in non-compliance with various conditions of the licence including converting the station to a full-time rebroadcasting transmitter for CJED-FM without prior approval by the commission. New conditions were placed upon the licensee.[18][19] CFLZ-FM was taken off the air shortly thereafter. It was returned to air on December 19, 2014, apparently continuing to simulcast to CJED-FM.
On July 15, 2016, at 6:13 am, CFLZ discontinued simulcasting CJED-FM and switched to Vista Radio's "Juice" format, broadcasting an adult hits format consisting of hits from the 1980s to today.[20][21] On January 15, 2018, Byrnes Communications Inc. acquired CFLZ and sister station CJED-FM with approval from the CRTC.[22] Byrnes Communications took control of CFLZ on February 1, 2018.
In September 2019, CFLZ announced that their signal might be temporarily weakened due to transmitter work. The work would be done to improve the present transmitter and allow CFLZ to broadcast at 50,000 Watts full-time. At the time of the announcement, the only "50,000 Watters" in the area were CHTZ-FM and CHRE-FM.
TKC Global Solutions LLC, Henderson, Virginia (FA8604-24-D-B001); and HPI Solutions LLC, Omaha, Nebraska (FA8604-24-D-B004), were awarded a combined $750,000,000 hybrid, firm-fixed-price and time-and-materials, multiple award, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for communication and enterprise information technology (IT) support services. This contract provides support for information technology services including network hardware support; physical and virtual servers, workstation deployment, laptop and peripheral support; facility access control and intrusion detection IT support; storage and backup system support; Linux, Solaris, and RedHat system administration support; RedHat operating system support; IT infrastructure installation and maintenance; storage and backup administration support; IT asset management; software vulnerability and testing support; information assurance and circuit management support. Work will be performed at Springfield Air National Guard, Springfield, Ohio; Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, Washington, D.C.; and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, and is expected to be completed by Feb. 28, 2034. This contract was a competitive acquisition, and 16 offers were received. No funds are being obligated at time of award. The Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, is the contracting activity.
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