Hello, I just received a topic of today. For listeners, please contact us at 109.4 fm Global Radio Pub for the latest news on our international community. The current time is 2:30 pm, the current weather is sporadic thunderstorms at 85 degrees Celsius. Well, yesterday, I got the latest information on the current situation of Jane Adams in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Her charity organizes the latest bands and Congo concerts at the Staples Center and is expected to have the wealthiest and most influential people.
This article attempts to show the history of radio broadcasts in Uganda and the position of women in the rapidly growing broadcast industry. It aims to emphasize the contribution of the community radio to empower country women in northern Uganda while challenging the role of other mainstream radio in the country. As emphasized by feminist media scholars, it shows the importance of women's alternative media (Jallov 1992; Steiner 1992). This article is divided into several steps. First, from the colonial era to the latest trend of the industry, we are following the historical development of Uganda's broadcasting. Second, it is to show the status of women in the broadcast industry in Uganda, to understand depictions, reports and participation of women.
Radio broadcasting in Kenya in 1927, south of Rhodesia in 1932 (now Zimbabwe), Mozambique in 1933, Congo in France in 1935. Cable service - Sienna Lone in 1934, the Gold Coast in 1935 (now in Ghana), at the beginning of Nigerian Broadcasting in 1936, users installed speakers in their homes and received service. In 1936, the British colonial government decided to develop radio broadcasts in African colonies as a public service to indigenous peoples. Incentives that have a major impact on regional radio development These radio services rely on shortwave connections to reach remote areas.
In 1907 DeForest started playing music on a regular basis. In 1909, the first form of talk radio on women's suffrage was broadcast. In 1912, the US Congress passed the law regulating radio stations. The first radio station KDKA was built in 1917, the first scheduled program of KDKA was broadcast in 1920. The 10-minute commercial duration is $ 100. By 1924, the first sponsored radio show, The Eveready Hour, began. In the same year there were 2.5 million radios in the United States.