Misplaced Pages

Max TV

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Max TV was a New Zealand music channel available free to air on UHF channel 49 in Auckland from 28 October 1993 to 3 December 1997.

#800199

6-585: Reforms in the New Zealand television landscape started in 1989, enabling the private sector to control television channels. Radio DJ Kevin Black , and Stereo FM director Allan Rutledge set a tender for a UHF music channel. The channel, named Much Music, collapsed in 1991, with the receiver selling the frequency to use. Auckland businessman Geoff Thorpe gained the rights to the frequency at a bargain price, after discussions with Kevin Black. When Max TV began transmission it

12-493: A day, seven days a week. Since the channel only had UHF coverage, Max TV actively promoted the installation of UHF aerials, at a time when penetration of such aerials was limited primarily to subscribers of Sky's UHF service. On 20 May 1997, the channel broadcast the music video to Iggy Pop's song "Pussy Walk". Local feminist group Women Against Pornography considered the music video 'offensive and insulting to women'. On 2 December 1997, Television New Zealand announced that

18-618: A parody version of the Deane Waretini hit " The Bridge ", which was released on the RTC label. It was credited to Kevin Blackatini and the Frigids. A collection of his Radio Hauraki prank calls entitled Kevin Black's Gold Solids was released on vinyl in 1982. This was followed by Hotline Loonacy (1985) and Phoney Business (1988). This New Zealand biographical article related to radio

24-531: The age of 15, and was a seaman with the British Merchant Navy , before moving into radio. Black died suddenly on 18 February 2013 after suffering a suspected heart attack at his home in Remuera , Auckland, just a few days short of his 70th birthday. His last on-air role was at the 60s and 70s radio station Solid Gold , where he worked from 1997 until his retirement in 2009. In 1981, Black and Co. recorded

30-480: The channel would close down on the following day. This New Zealand television–related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Kevin Black (broadcaster) Kevin Black (1943–18 February 2013), known professionally as Blackie, was a New Zealand radio broadcaster. A former breakfast host on Auckland 's Radio Hauraki , he was once the highest-paid private radio DJ in New Zealand. Black left St. Patrick's College, Wellington at

36-600: Was known as Max: The Music Channel . The channel was jointly owned and operated by Aztel Holdings (consisting of radio personality Kevin Black who owned the frequency licence, and his partner Jeff Thorpe) and On-Line Productions, a video production house. Broadcasts started at 4:00pm on 28 October 1993 from the facilities of production company Vidcom. The channel initially broadcast from 4:00pm until midnight Monday to Thursday; 4:00pm until 1:00am on Friday; 7:00am until 1:00am on Saturday; and 7:00am until midnight on Sunday. By April 1996 its transmission hours were extended to 24 hours

#800199