Youth radio

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Youth Radio (formerly Youth Radio ) is called radio stations or broadcasts that are fully geared to a youthful audience.

The development of youth-specific broadcasters is related to the emergence of private radio in the 1980s and the subsequent differentiation of the range of programs. The media pedagogy manual writes about youth radio: “The programs for the 'youth scene' are editorially designed by teenagers and young adults. The competition from commercial waves of young people is opposed to new music trends, and sometimes political and societal issues are taken up in order to create a 'counter-public' ”.

Youth radio stations under public law in German-speaking countries are Dasding ( SWR ), Unserding ( SR ), Fritz ( RBB ), 1 Live ( WDR ), MDR Sputnik ( MDR ), N-Joy ( NDR ), PULS ( BR ), You FM ( HR ), Bremen Next ( Radio Bremen ), Deutschlandfunk Nova ( Deutschlandradio ) and FM4 ( ORF ) as well as Radio SRF Virus ( SRF ). Private radios for younger listeners are among others. a. egoFM and Kiss FM . Established broadcasts are or were Zündfunk (since 1974) and radio without hair (1989–1996).

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Uwe Sander and a .: Handbook of Media Education . Wiesbaden: VS, Verl. Für Sozialwiss., 2007. ISBN 3-531-15016-2 (p. 398)