YES 933

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YES 933
Broadcast areaSingapore
Johor Bahru/Johor Bahru District (Malaysia)
Batam/Batam Islands, Riau Islands (Indonesia)
Frequency93.3 MHz
BrandingYES 933
Programming
Language(s)Mandarin (Singdarin)
FormatTop 40 (CHR) (Mandopop/K-pop)
Ownership
OwnerMediacorp
Capital 958
Love 972
History
First air date
1 January 1990; 34 years ago (1990-01-01)
Links
Webcast
WebsiteYES 933

YES 933, formerly known as 933醉心频道 (933 Zuìxīn píndào, "933 Intoxicated Channel"), is a Mandarin radio station owned by Mediacorp in Singapore. The station now holds the slogan of 顶尖流行音乐电台,引领潮流时代 (Top pop music station, leading the trend). It is a 24-hour music station that plays contemporary hits. It also includes a modern trendy mixture of lifestyle, food and travel tips as well as on weekend getaways. This is a station that caters to youngsters by allowing them to get informed about what is trending now in terms of life and playing fresh new launch songs as a global premiere in the first minute. YES 933 ended its broadcast on 20 January 2017 at 10:00 at Caldecott Broadcast Centre and thereafter, moved to the new campus at 1 Stars Avenue. The first programme was broadcast there from 12:00 on the same day.

The programmes on YES 933 as of Mar 2024 include 大咖一起来 with Jeff Goh, Chen Ning and Gao Mei Gui in the morning, 午刻乐乐(AM) with Lin Pei Fen and 午刻乐乐(PM) with Siau Jia Hui and Jeff Tan during lunchtime and early afternoon, in the afternoon and evening, 双节坤佳 with Zhang Ying Shuang (Hazelle Teo), Zhong Kun Hua (Kenneth Chung) Chen Qijia (Evelyn Tan) and Yeah 夜不打烊 with Zhu Zeliang and Lim Pinjuen at night.

History[edit]

Singapore Radio began in 1936 with stations each broadcasting in its four official languages - namely Radio One (English), Radio Two (Malay), Radio Three (Chinese) and Radio Four (Tamil). The then owner - Singapore Broadcasting Corporation - launched a revamp campaign and started several stations targeting different segments of the population. 987 began in 1989 to play English hits for the youth, while its Chinese equivalent, YES 933 began broadcasting on 1 January 1990 at 09:33. The Malay equivalent, Ria 897 began in December of the same year.

Initially, YES 933 was also known as Radio 6.[1] At launch, the station had nine deejays on four to five hour shifts and aired fewer commercials than that of Radio 3.[2]

YES 933 began as an 18-hour station, broadcasting from 06:00 to 24:00. Broadcasting hours were extended to 02:00 in December of the same year, making it the first Chinese radio station to offer music after midnight. It finally went 24 hours on 1 May 1994.

In 1997, 93.3 was the most-listened radio station in Singapore for the fifth year since 1993, with almost a million listeners every week, attributed to its uniqueness which catches the attention of listeners, combined with music, deejays and creative jingles.[3]

YES 933 ended its broadcast on 20 January 2017 at 10:00 at Caldecott Broadcast Centre and thereafter, moved to the new campus at 1 Stars Avenue. The first programme was broadcast there from 12:00 on the same day.

Shows produced[edit]

  • Dear DJ (亲愛的九月)
  • Hey DJ! (校园新生代 Hey DJ!)
  • The Story Between Us (我们之间的故事)
  • Campushunter (校园搜查队)

Frequencies[edit]

Frequencies TRP (kW) Broadcast area Transmitter site
93.3 FM 6 Singapore Bukit Batok Transmission Centre
Johor Bahru/Johor Bahru District, Johor, Malaysia
Batam/Batam Islands, Riau Islands, Indonesia

National anthem[edit]

The National anthem plays at 06:00 SGT daily at the start of the broadcasting day. The National anthem is played in full with the lyrics being sung.

Nation National Anthem Start Broadcast Final Broadcast
Singapore Majulah Singapura New Year's Day 1990 now

External links[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "As the dial turns". The Straits Times (retrieved from NLB). 4 March 1990. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Welcome addition but 'format and hours leave room for improvement'". The Straits Times. 9 January 1990. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
  3. ^ "Listen, FM 93.3 is top station here again". The Straits Times. 18 December 1997. Retrieved 28 January 2024.