https://www.myjoyonline.com/joy-fm-wins-best-station-award/-------https://www.myjoyonline.com/joy-fm-wins-best-station-award/
National

Joy FM wins Best Station award

Joy FM has been adjudged the Best Radio Station for 2006 in the first ever BBC West Africa Radio Awards. The station also won the Local On-Air Campaign of the Year whilst its Programs Director and former News Editor, Albert Kofi Owusu won the News Journalist of the Year award. The announcement was made at a news conference in Accra on Tuesday afternoon. The entries from Joy FM and another local radio station, Citi Fm will be entered into the Africa-wide contest with regional winners from South and East Africa. Judges of the West Africa category of the BBC Africa Radio Awards praised radio journalists as the most developed and professional in the sub-region. Professor Dora Nkem Akunyili, who chaired the panel of judges for the award said, "out of the more than 100 entries for the seven categories, entries from Ghana stood out as the most professional in terms of presentation, details and technical quality." The award was the third and final of the regional heats as the first two, the Eastern Africa and Southern Africa categories had been held already. Other judges on the panel, including Ms. Vera Kwakofi, Project Manager for the award and Bola Mosuro, Senior Producer and Presenter with BBC and Selase Kwawu, a student of the University of Ghana, also said they were proud of Ghanaian radio journalists for the quality of their entries. They attributed the high quality of the entries from Ghana to the stiff competition in the radio market in Ghana, saying that kind of competition did not exist in other countries in the sub-region and entries from those countries were largely mediocre. Ibukunluwa Sammi from Ray Power FM in Nigeria won the Young Broadcaster of the year. The seventh award, which was the Sports Journalist of the Year was not awarded because according to the judges all the entries were sub-standard and could not meet the criteria. Prof Akunyili observed that most of the sports entries had muffled voices, lacked clarity and the kind of detailed information necessary to sustain the interest of the listener. She noted that unlike the television broadcaster, the radio broadcaster was handicapped since he or she had no pictures to support his or her report but had to use just the voice to create imaginative pictures in the minds of the listener. "We also had problems with the intonation of most of the broadcasters who sent sports entries because most of them tried to sound western and in the process they sounded ambiguous, unclear and difficult to understand," she said. The over-all BBC African Radio Journalists Award would be held on May 26, 2007 in Nairobi, Kenya.

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.