World Radio Day 2019 celebrating Dialogue, Tolerance and Peace

The theme of this year’s UNESCO World Radio Day is Dialogue, Tolerance and Peace.

Celebrated annually on Feb. 13 since 2012, World Radio Day marks the anniversary of the day the United Nations established United Nations Radio in 1946. Broadcasting from makeshift studios at UN Headquarters in Lake Success, New York, UN Radio signed on with “This is the United Nations calling the peoples of the world.” Lacking its own broadcast facilities, UN Radio initially had other broadcasters relay its programming to different regions, including the CBC’s International Service, the BBC and Voice of America. 

Events are being held today in more than 80 countries around the world, including UNESCO headquarters in Paris, celebrating the impact of radio in the pursuit of a more peaceful and tolerant world.

While the Canadian relationship to radio may be changing in the internet age, according to the Numeris Fall 2018 Diary (12+) and Edison Share of Ear Canada 2017, Canadians still consume 445,661,000 hours of radio per week, reaching 85 per cent of the population. Radio still accounts for 61 per cent of all audio consumed by Canadians.

The Media Technology Monitor (MTM) says 22 per cent of Canadians report having listened to radio online in the last month, with 88 per cent of all Canadians still tuning in. That compares to 92 per cent a decade ago. Broken down by age, MTM says 92 per cent of those aged 35-54 are listening to radio, compared to 85 per cent of those over age 65, and 84 per cent of Canadians 18-34.

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