- Radio Belize
The Broadcasting Corporation of Belize, otherwise known as Radio Belize, was a radio station in
Belize that shut down in November of 1998. Until the 1980s it was Belize's only radio station.Beginnings
The BCB began as the
British Honduras Broadcasting Service, modeled on the home country'sBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Amandala columnist Selvin "Smokey Joe" Wade remembers the station by its original name, ZIK 2, with which it signed on in the 1930s. At this stage it played mainly music from abroad. With the rise of the nationalist movement efforts were made to bring the BHBS closer to Belizean identity and it assumed the name Radio Belize.The Sefe Coleman era
Edison Denburg Clifford Coleman, better known to Belizeans as "Sefe", entered the radio business in the 1960s and completely revolutionized radio in Belize. He was very popular & funny and was Belize's foremost comedian. Coleman was a mainstay of Radio Belize through the 1980s until his death in 1994. Son Gerard Coleman has followed him into the radio business at
LOVE FM and Positive Vibes. During this time Radio Belize was considered the official voice of the rulingPeople's United Party .Radio Belize entertained Belizeans with a variety of music. In that era television broadcasting was unavailable in Belize, so the population was dependent on the only radio station in the country for entertainment and news. Popular programs from the BBC stable included "Portia Faces Life", and Doctor Paul which were aired daily & nightly.
The Belize Radio One experiment and brand extension
With the accession of the UDP in 1984, Radio Belize began to experiment with being more of a culture-oriented station rather than simply playing music. Now known as Belize Radio One, it mixed contemporary music with chatter from local radio personalities: Debbie Tillett, Mike Nicholson, Rudy Aguilar,
Andy Palacio , Paul Mahung, and in the 1990s, Silvana Woods and Brian Mossiah. But the revamped Belize Radio One, even with a new television wing, still found trouble holding its own against the all-music format ofKREM Radio , established in 1989. The government first tried privatizing the BCB and then extending its brand to include an all-music station named Friends FM, but with the proliferation of radio stations in Belize and an increase in technology, the BCB was rapidly becoming obsolete. General ManagerRene Villanueva Sr. resigned in 1992 after helming the BCB for two years and working there for 23.Limping to the finish line
As it entered its last decade the BCB seemed anachronistic compared to other local stations. While still owning some of the best equipment in Belizean radio at that time, it could not handle the introduction of competitive and new formats of radio. All that remained was to shut it down, and after one last act of service-informing the nation of the progress of 1998's
Hurricane Mitch -DJ Neil Hall (and, according to Villanueva, himself and Patrick Jones) shut down at 12:00 PM on November 30, 1998. The equipment was bidded out and purchased by LOVE FM andKREM Radio , respectively. While the BCB itself is defunct, former employees are still to be found on the Belizean airwaves, working for other stations. LOVE FM is unique in this respect; former BCB manager Villanueva now owns and operates that station and Mossiah, Terry Gordon, Ruben Morales Iglesias and some other veterans work there. Mike Nicholson worked forFM 2000 and now forPositive Vibes FM . In this way, the BCB remains, as its slogan says, "The Voice of Belize."Reference and external links
* [http://www.swl.net/patepluma/central/misc/belize89.html Don Moore article on the BCB in 1989]
* [http://www.channel5belize.com/archive_detail_story.php?story_id=568 Channel 5's G. Michael Reid on losing the BCB]
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