Saturday 30 July 2016

ABC station older than the ABC itself celebrates 85 years of radio in central Queensland

Extract from ABC News 

Posted Thu at 6:47pm


One of regional Queensland's oldest radio stations is celebrating 85 years of continuous operation, making it an ABC station older than the ABC itself.
4RK was started by the privately-run Australian Broadcasting Company in Rockhampton in central Queensland on July 29, 1931.
Radio historian David Brownsey said that was almost a year before the ABC as we know it was created.
The Australian Broadcasting Commission — later to become Corporation — was launched the following year on July 1, 1932.
The ABC took on 4RK, and the Rockhampton station became the fledgling national broadcaster's first regional Queensland station.
"Radio in those days was quite a novelty, and sets were expensive and few and far between, but they had a very, very attentive audience," Mr Brownsey said.


Twenty-three years ago an aspiring radio presenter a few weeks away from his 21st birthday applied for a job with ABC Capricornia (as 4RK is known).
He was Spencer Howson, who has now been at the helm of 612 ABC Brisbane's top-rating Breakfast show for 15 years.
"At times I do joke about the time I spent in Rockhampton, but in truth I wouldn't change a thing," Mr Howson said.
"Whenever I talk to journalism students or people wanting to get into radio, I always tell them how enriching it will be to spend a couple of years outside the south-east of the state."
One of the highlights of Mr Howson's time in Rockhampton was reporting on a man who hatched a scheme to buy one mushroom at a time from the supermarket, because the price rounded down to nothing.
The story led to shoppers being banned from buying individual mushrooms.


Andrew Lofthouse, a familiar face in Queensland homes from presenting the statewide television news on the Nine Network, also spent time working at the Rockhampton station.
"The first day I was supposed to come to work, I couldn't get to the studio because there was a bomb scare at The Factory nightclub around the corner and police had cordoned off the entire block," Mr Lofthouse said.
"I remember getting a call in the morning saying 'You'd better not come in because they're not going to let you near the building', so what a start that was."
Mr Lofthouse did eventually get in the building, and said his experience in Rockhampton was "the best possible start I could get in radio".
"I remember doing an outside broadcast from the Beef Expo down near the showgrounds, and all of a sudden getting taken off air," he said.
"It took us a long time to work out what the problem was. We checked all our connections, we checked the outside broadcast trailer, the studio, all of those things.
"In the end we discovered a bull had trodden on the power cord going to the circuit box and pulled the plug out."


Cath Hurley, the ABC's head of regional content, started her career as a rural reporter at 4RK.
"It was a wonderful opportunity," Ms Hurley said.
"It's one of the most challenging and rewarding jobs in the ABC.
"I'd been in the station for about a month when the second rural reporter said 'I'm going out west, can you present the television weather for the next two weeks?'
"In those days they used to draw the maps with coloured markers. You'd get the information on the telex machine, and you'd stand in front of the camera and deliver the weather.
"Fortunately at the time it was the middle of winter, so it was fine and sunny in central Queensland virtually every day."


Award-winning journalist Chris Masters, Four Corners' longest serving correspondent, credits his time at 4RK in the late 1970s for launching his career in television.
"It was my first stint in television, and while I'd worked in radio for half a dozen years, to my surprise I found television just worked for me," he said.
Mr Masters said working in regional stations built strong storytelling skills in broadcasters, and had honed his work ethic.
"I remember having to come back with something like four stories in a day and doing them all on a 10-minute reel of film," he said.
"That generated discipline that was particularly valuable to me later in my career."
Mr Masters still has painful memories of losing four 4RK colleagues in a plane crash in October 1983.
The light aircraft was on a charter flight from Rockhampton to Kenlogan Station to gather material for rural current affairs program Countrywide when it crashed about 40km from Clermont.
Lost in the crash were rural reporter Bruce Anning, cameraman Joe Mooney, sound technician Bill Fryer and station manager Ralph Elphinstone, an experienced pilot who was flying the plane.

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