2SM

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2SM
Broadcast areaSydney
Frequency1269 kHz AM
Programming
FormatNews talk
Ownership
Owner
Dance Super Digi
Fun Super Digi
Gorilla Radio
Zoo Digital
History
First air date
24 December 1931 (1931-12-24)[1]
Former frequencies
1270 KHz AM (1931–1978)
Call sign meaning
St Marys Cathedral
Technical information
Power5kW[2]
Transmitter coordinates
33°50′01″S 151°04′12″E / 33.8336°S 151.0700°E / -33.8336; 151.0700
Links
Website2sm.com.au

2SM is an Australian radio station, licensed to and serving Sydney, broadcasting on 1269 kilohertz on the AM band. It is owned and operated by Broadcast Operations Group. The SM call sign is taken from the initials of Saint Mary's.[3][4][5]

2SM's programs are heard across the 2SM Super Radio Network in regional New South Wales, the Northern Territory and Queensland, consisting of over 60 AM and FM stations.

2SM unveiled its denim zipper logo in 1975. Although the logo is inextricably linked to 2SM, it was, according to radio historian Wayne Mac, actually created for Brisbane pop station 4IP by a company called Eagle Marketing and subsequently adopted by other stations including 2SM, 3XY and 2NX.[6]

History

[edit]

James Meany, a parish priest at St Mark's Drummoyne, raised funds to allow Archbishop Michael Kelly to form the Catholic Broadcasting Co. Ltd, and it obtained a licence for radio 2SM in 1931.[7] The station, owned by the Roman Catholic Church, was opened by Kelly on 24 December 1931.[8] Apart from the regular Question Box program of Dr Rumble, religious content was, for most part, not its focus; but for most of its life 2SM followed a conservative line in its programming, and it was promoted as "The Family Station".[6]

In 1958 2SM moved to premises at 257 Clarence Street, Sydney, maintaining its style. At the time, the station was run by General Manager Bill Stephenson, who started his radio career at 2UE in the 1940s before moving to 2SM in the 1950s. In September 1963 Stephenson oversaw a radical overhaul of 2SM's format. It started 24-hour service, and was relaunched as a Top 40 station. It had Australia's first team of disc jockeys, dubbed "The Good Guys"—a US-radio inspired format subsequently copied by 3AK, 5KA, 6PR and others. It relied heavily on adaptations of formulaic programming strategies sourced from American commercial radio.[6]

Then in early 1967 2SM became the first station in the country to adopt the new "talkback" technology which enabled presenters for the first time to broadcast phone conversations with members of the public. In November 1968 2SM reverted to an all music format. In 1969 2SM aggressively fought to regain the youth audience it had lost to 2UW. During 1970 2SM established itself as one of the most promotionally active and innovative commercial stations. Rod Muir successfully transplanted the American "More Music" format to Sydney, making minor adaptations for the Australian market. With stringent format policies applying to music flow, commercial content, what announcers said and the placement of jingles, 2SM redefined the whole premise of music based radio in Australia. Key to the More Music philosophy was a strictly limited, high rotation play list of around 30 songs and which at peak times reputedly included as few as 15 songs in one three-hour shift. The new format had several significant effects. First and foremost, it brought to an abrupt end the days of the true "personality" DJs, as exemplified by 2UW's Ward "Pally" Austin and 3XY's legendary Stan "The Man" Rofe. The rigid formatting restricted the on-air presentation, replacing it with a highly affected, American-style presented by a largely faceless and interchangeable roster of "rock jocks". But even more significantly, the "More Music" format took programming decisions out of the hands of DJs and put them into the hands of consultants and back room programming executives.[6]

From around 1970 until the mid-1980s, 2SM dominated Sydney commercial radio. At its peak in the late-1970s it was the highest rating and most profitable station in the history of Australian radio. It epitomised and defined commercial AM Top 40 radio practice around the country for fifteen years and long after 2SM itself lost popularity, its successful programming formula was still influencing its FM band successors.[6]

The introduction of new AM station, 2WS, in 1978, and FM stations 2Day and Triple M at the start of the 1980s saw 2SM's glory days end. In the early 1980s the station retained reasonable ratings with contemporary music formats and slogans such as "More Music", "Rock of the 80s" and "The Power". In 1988 the station dropped its Top 40 format as well as the 2SM brand when it became "Lite & Easy 1269". Its final rating as a Top 40 station had been 6.9%. The years since have seen its format undergo numerous changes, including easy listening and country formats (KICK AM). The ratings never again surpassed 4%.

In the 1990s, the station regained its original callsign (2SM) and recorded some of the lowest ratings ever by a Sydney commercial radio station. In February 1992 a commercial syndicate headed by John Brown attempted to purchase the station.[9][10] In July the station was finally sold to Wesgo, who sacked the entire on-air staff and put the station into automation.[11] Wesgo relaunched the station with a country music format in October.[12] With the station still last place in the ratings, it went back to easy listening in May 1994, adopting the new name Gold 1269 and by Survey 8 1994 hit the heights of 7.1%.[13] In late 1994 Wesgo was purchased by Australian Provincial Newspapers, who later purchased the Australian Radio Network in March 1995, requiring some stations to be sold due to media ownership rules.[14] The station was sold to Kick Media, headed by former INXS manager, Chris Murphy.[15] It was rebranded Kick AM in mid-October with a format comprising country, rock and blues.[16] RG Capital bought a 40% stake in February 1996.[17] By the end of 1996 the station still had low ratings, causing the owners to relaunch it on Christmas Eve 1996 as The New 2SM, with a format of hits from the 60s to 80s.[18]

In 2002 the night time show, hosted by Graeme Gilbert, scored a rating of just 0.1%, the lowest rating ever recorded for a commercial program in a metro market in Australia. 2SM subsequently withdrew from the Sydney radio ratings.

From 1980 until 1984, 2SM owned a 34% shareholding in Brisbane television station TVQ.[19][20]

Line-up

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Monday to Friday

  • Talk Overnight with Cheralyn Darcy Monday 12pm to 5am
  • Talk Overnight with David Gubbay Tuesday-Friday 12pm to 5am
  • Breakfast with Richard King (5 am to 9 am)
  • Mornings with John Laws (9 am to 12 pm)
  • Afternoons with Pete Davis (12 pm to 4 pm)
  • Talkin' Sport (4 pm to 6 pm)
  • Talk Tonight with Gary Stewart (8 pm to 12 am)

Weekends

  • Talk Overnight With Dave Sutherland Saturday 12pm to 4am
  • Brent Bultitude (Saturday 6 am to 12)
  • Off The Bench (Saturday 12 pm to 2 pm)
  • Barry Hill (Saturday 2 pm to 6 pm)
  • Saturday Night Live with Dave Sutherland 6pm to 12pm
  • Talk Overnight with Cheralyn Darcey Sunday 12pm to 4am
  • Reel Adventures (Sunday 5 am to 6 am)
  • Brent Bultitude (Sunday 6 am to 12 pm)
  • Tony Vidray (Sunday 12 pm to 6 pm)
  • Dave Sutherland ( Sunday 6 pm to 12 am)


2SM airs news bulletins every hour and half-hourly during breakfast.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Commercial Radio Broadcasting Licences" (PDF). Australian Communications & Media Authority. 21 November 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2007.
  2. ^ Radio and Television Broadcasting Stations Archived 31 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Australian Communications & Media Authority: October 2011. p. 8.
  3. ^ "26 Dec 1931 - Broadcasting Station - Trove".
  4. ^ "31 Dec 1931 - New Catholic Broadcasting Station (2SM) Inaugurated - Trove". Freeman's Journal. 31 December 1931.
  5. ^ "17 Nov 1931 - R.C. Broadcasting Station - Trove". Barrier Miner. 17 November 1931.
  6. ^ a b c d e "MilesAgo - Radio - 2SM (Sydney)".
  7. ^ "Meany, James (1879–1953)". Biography - James Meany - Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  8. ^ "Broadcasting Station 2SM (St Mary's)". Sydney Morning Herald. 26 December 1931. p. 6. Retrieved 26 April 2010.; Bridget Griffen-Foley, Monsignor James Meany, the Catholic Weekly and 2SM, Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society 34 (2013), 58-71.
  9. ^ Watson, Bronwyn (14 February 1992). "New Boss Silent on 2SM's Future". News and Features. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 4. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  10. ^ Lecky, Sue (22 May 1992). "Church Ends Talks on Sale of Radio Station". Business. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 27. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  11. ^ Lecky, Sue (4 July 1992). "DJs Fired as 2SM Turns up the Muzak". News and Features. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 1. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  12. ^ "Sydney station takes the country road. (2SM radio station features country music) (Radio)". Billboard. Vol. 104, no. 45. 7 November 1992. p. 72. ISSN 0006-2510.
  13. ^ Lecky, Sue (9 May 1994). "2SM Lights Out as City Station Gives up on Country". News and Features. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 2. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  14. ^ "O'Reilly Link Firm Sells Radio Stations". Irish Times. 11 August 1995.
  15. ^ Lecky, Sue (11 August 1995). "Ex-INXS Manager Is Going For Gold". News and Features. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 3. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  16. ^ Freeman, Jane (11 September 1995). "Kick Radio". The Guide. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 6.
  17. ^ Strickland, Katrin (1 October 1996). "Spin Master". The Australian. p. 23.
  18. ^ Freeman, Jane (6 January 1997). "Sultan of Breakfast Swing Puts His Zing into 2SM's Zipper". News and Features. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 5. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  19. ^ ABT told of plans to warehouse TVQ shares Canberra Times 9 August 1980 page 21
  20. ^ Qld TV channel pursuing media interest Canberra Times 6 May 1984 page 3
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