Jump to content

U105

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

U105
Broadcast areaNorthern Ireland
FrequencyFM: 105.8 MHz (Belfast)
DAB: 12D (Bauer NI)
RDSU105
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary
Ownership
OwnerNews Broadcasting
History
First air date
14 November 2005 (2005-11-14)
Links
Webcastwww.u105.com/player/
Websitewww.u105.com Edit this at Wikidata

U105 is a Belfast, Northern Ireland, based radio station, providing a mix of music and speech as well as hourly news bulletins. It is owned by News Broadcasting[citation needed] and was launched at 6am on 14 November 2005.[1]

U105 broadcasts on 105.8 FM in Belfast and surrounding area, from studios at City Quays 2.[2] Programmes are transmitted on FM from the Black Mountain transmitting station, located a few miles to the west of Belfast. The station also broadcasts throughout Northern Ireland on DAB and online. In the Q3 2021 RAJAR survey, the station had 217,000 weekly listeners, with total weekly hours of 2,102,000 (higher than its rival Downtown Radio, which had 64,000 more weekly listeners). At 9.69, the station had the highest weekly hours per listener among its main local commercial rivals (Cool FM, Downtown Radio, Downtown Country and Q Radio).

As of September 2023, the station broadcasts to a weekly audience of 280,000, according to RAJAR.[3]

In December 2023, seven of U105s presenters took industrial tribunal action against the station, listed as Elizabeth (Linda) Cullen, John Patrick Cullen (Johnny Hero), David Anthony Johnson, Andrew (Jerry) Lang, Angela Denise Scott, Carolyn Ann Stewart, and Stephen Woods.[4] Jerry Lang subsequently left U105.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Moore, Barry (13 July 2017). "U105 now available on DAB across Northern Ireland". Digital Radio UK. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  2. ^ "U105 presenters to join former UTV colleagues in new Harbour studios". Belfasttelegraph.
  3. ^ "RAJAR". www.rajar.co.uk. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  4. ^ Garrett Hargan (2 December 2023). "Seven DJs at U105 launch industrial tribunal case against station". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  5. ^ Andrew Madden (8 December 2023). "DJ announces departure after 15 years". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
[edit]