Radio transmission in Paris began in 1921, and today there are many
AM and
FM radio stations available to listeners in
Paris and the
Île-de-France region.
History
The first radio broadcast in Paris aimed at the general public took place on 24 December 1921. The next year, the French government allowed the establishment of the first private radio station in Paris:
Radiola.
After the
Second World War, Parisian radio was nationalized, and it was not until 1981, following the election of
François Mitterrand that private companies were able easily to broadcast in the Paris area. Mitterrand was attempting to permit the growth of radio stations through privatization and fewer regulations, following the
Italian example (in 1977, the Italian government permitted the establishment of private stations, leading to a boom in the number of stations). In the early 1980s, there were more than 200 radio stations in Paris. These stations often overlapped, broadcast only sporadically and often low-quality content. This chaotic situation came to an end after the establishment of several regulatory agencies — first the Haute Autorité, then the
CNCL, and finally the Conseil Supérieur de l'Audiovisuel which granted licences to operate on specific frequencies to certain companies.
The first radio stations in Paris (chronological)
Radio Tour Eiffel (general interest; state radio) 24 December 1921-June 1940. At the start, it broadcast only for a half-hour a day: a weather forecast, a review of the press and music. The first news broadcast took place on it 3 November 1925.
Radiola (general interest; private) 6 November 1922 to 28 March 1924. Radiola's first trials took place on 26 June 1922 and its first regular broadcasts began on 6 November 1922.
Marcel Laporte provided the most-frequently-heard voice for the station. Its first news broadcasts took place on 6 January 1923. It became
Radio Paris on 29 March 1924 (general interest; private, then state-run on 17 December 1933) 29 March 1924–17 June 1940. It kept its name of Radio Paris from July 1940 until August 1944, but the station was then run by Nazis and French collaborators.
Radio PTT (general interest; state-run) 20 January 1923 until June 1940.
Poste Parisien (general interest; private) from 30 March 1924 to June 1940.
Radio LL (general interest; private) from March 1926 until 28 September 1935. It became
Radio Cité (general interest; private) from 29 September 1935 until June 1940.
Radio Vitus (general interest; private) from 1 December 1926 until 14 January 1934. It became
Poste de l’Ile de France (general interest; private) from 15 January 1934 until June 1940
Radio Luxembourg (general interest, private) from 15 March 1933 until 21 September 1939, and was resurrected from 1945 to 1966, before becoming
RTL (general interest) since 1966
Radio 37 (general interest; private) from 5 September 1937 to 13 June 1940
Poste colonial (general interest, directed towards the French colonies; state radio) from 30 April 1931 until 1 March 1938. It became
Paris Mondial (general interest, directed towards French colonies, in 20 languages; state radio) from 2 March 1938 until 17 June 1940.
From Public Service to Pirate Radio (non-exhaustive chronological list)
Paris Inter, then
RTF Inter (general interest, state-run) from 1947 to 1963. Became
France Inter (general interest, state-run) from 1963 on.
Europe 1 (general interest, private) from 1955 on.
Radio FG (originally serving the gay community, it has now somewhat walked away from that angle. Today it is classified as a mostly techno/house radio) since 1981 (Trivia: FG stands for Fréquence Gay).
Radio Montmartre (French music) from 1981 until 11 July 1995. Became
Montmartre FM (French music) from 11 July 1995 until 1998, then became
MFM (French music) since 1998.
La voix du Lézard (modern rock) from 1982 to 1986. Became
Skyrock (top 40, then top 40/rap) since 1986
Hit FM (?) from 1 January 1985 to
11 mars 1988. Became
Europe 2 (Adult contemporary, sister station to Europe 1) from January 1987 until
12 mars 1988, at which point it became Hit FM once again).
CFM (General interest FM, sister station of Europe 1) from 15 April 1985 to 30 May 1986. Broadcasts some news shows produced by Europe 1.
Gilda (General interest FM) from 1981 until 1987. Became
Chérie FM (Music and news; owned by NRJ) in 1987.
Paris Jazz (jazz) since 1987. Merger of "Génération" and "Paris Jazz sur Paris".
Pacific FM (music) from July 1987 until 13 November 1989 (became
Rire et Chansons, (music and sketches; owned by NRJ) from 14 November 1989 on.
Chic FM (music) from January 1986 until 2 September 1987 Became
FUN (top 40) in 1987.
95.2 (music) from 1983 until 1987. Became
KISS FM (General interest FM) from
30 avril 1987 until October 1990; Frequency shared since April 2001 by
Ici et Maintenant and
Radio Néo
Muppies FM (children's radio) began as pirate in 1987, later became
Superloustic (children's radio) from May 1987 until September 1987. Restarted in 2004 as an AM station.
Radio Eglantine (Portuguese) from the 1980s until the 1990s.
KWFM (rock) from September 1989 until October 1990, following California FM [not the US station from Tucson, AZ].
Aventure FM (owned by the French Army) from December 1987 until 1989. Became
Maxximum (dance; owned by RTL) from 23 October 1989 to 5 January 1992. Became
M40 (top 40; owned by RTL) from 6 January 1992 until 18 January 1995. Became
RTL 1 (top 40; owned by RTL) from 19 January 1995, then became
RTL 2 (pop-rock; owned by RTL) from 1995 on.
Bizz FM (Music) from November 1992 to 31 December 1993. Station belonged to Eddie Barclay. Became
Chante France (French music) since le 1 January 1994.
Le Mouv' (soft rock, public service) since 8 December 2001.