DYMF

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DYMF (Bombo Radyo Cebu)
Bombo Radyo Cebu logo.png
CityCebu City
Broadcast areaCentral Visayas and surrounding areas
Frequency963 kHz
BrandingDYMF Bombo Radyo
Programming
Language(s)Cebuano, Filipino
FormatNews, Public Affairs, Talk, Drama
Temporary: Silent
NetworkBombo Radyo
Ownership
OwnerBombo Radyo Philippines
(People's Broadcasting Service, Inc.)
95.5 Star FM
History
First air date
1978; 44 years ago (1978)
Last air date
December 16, 2021; 19 days ago (2021-12-16) (temporary)
Call sign meaning
Marcelino Florete
Technical information
Licensing authority
NTC
Power10,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
10°17′18″N 123°52′50″E / 10.28833°N 123.88056°E / 10.28833; 123.88056
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteBombo Radyo Cebu

DYMF (963 AM) Bombo Radyo is a radio station owned and operated by Bombo Radyo Philippines through its licensee People's Broadcasting Service, Inc. Its studio and offices are located at Bombo Radyo Broadcast Center, 87-A Borromeo St., Cebu City; its transmitter is located at Sitio Alaska, Brgy. Mambaling, Cebu City. It operates daily from 4:00 AM to 10:30 PM.[1][2][3]

DYMF is former home of the Bombo Radyo Drama Production Center, now spun off as the Cebu's Extremes Travel & Entertainment Provider (Cebu City) Corp. It is still supplying drama programming to all cebuano-speaking Bombo Radyo stations in Visayas and Mindanao.

DYMF used to air NBA games in the 90s.[4]

DYMF is temporarily off the air on December 17, 2021 due to the effects of Typhoon Rai (Odette), caused the AM transmitter was damaged brought by the typhoon a day after. In interim, the station is de facto branded as Bombo Radyo-Star FM, which temporarily took over the broadcast of its sister station DYMX 95.5 FM. Several programs and its news anchors from the station are then transmitted from Bombo Radyo Broadcast Center in Borromeo and it is remains delivered in the Cebuano language. Music programmings from Star FM Cebu are delivered in English and Filipino respectively. This will similar to Bombo Radyo Tacloban which migrated to the FM band on 95.1 FM in 2005.

References[]

  1. ^ "Radio and TV Broadcast Station". NTC Region 7. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  2. ^ Seares, Pachico (2017). "Cebu Journalism & Journalists 2017". Retrieved June 30, 2020 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Rubio, Gregg (April 6, 2013). "Bombo may take legal moves vs Capitol". The Freeman. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  4. ^ Sayson, Homer (February 14, 2020). "Cebu scribes stand by 'great kid' Slaughter in time of crisis". SPIN.ph. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
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