ZM (New Zealand)
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| ZM | |
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| Broadcast area | 18 markets in New Zealand |
|---|---|
| Slogan | Todays Hit Music |
| First air date | c.1973 |
| Format | Hit Music |
| Owner | The Radio Network |
| Website | zmonline.com |
ZM, or ZMFM is a radio network. ZM is part of The Radio Network of New Zealand. The network's slogan, "Today's Hit Music", reflects the network's chart-music playlist of pop, rock, hip hop and dance music. The network has stations in 18 markets in New Zealand and is also available online. It reaches around 395,000 listeners weekly and targets the 15-39 demographic.
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The ZM name derives from the original 1ZM radio station founded by W.W. ((Bill) Rodgers in the late 1920s in Manurewa, then a farming village south of Auckland, The letter Z meant a privately owned (later commercial) station, and the M stood for Manurewa.
The station was later acquired by the NZ Government and moved 26 km north to Auckland City, where it shared space in the 1941 Art Deco Broadcasting House studios of 1ZB. In April 1944 1ZM was handed overto the US AFRS military broadcasting service to provide entertainment for US troops on R & R leave in Auckland, as part of the AES Mosquito Network. The American programming, drawn from all three US radio networks (ABC, NBC and CBS) and played without commercial advertisements, proved popular not only with US troops but also with Aucklanders who appreciated the lively style of presentation and the latest American hits. After the war 1ZM was returned to the government broadcasting department, New Zealand Broadcasting Service (NZBS) and its successor, but still state-owned, New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation (NZBC).
As part of a reshuffle of frequencies and call-signs 1ZM was re-named, first 1ZD and then 1YD, in line with the Wellington metro station 2YD which had opened in 1937. 1ZM /1YD was turned into a low-power non-commercial metro music station, broadcasting retro hits and oldies from 5 pm to 10 pm weeknights, and from 10 am to 10 pm weekends. Later, to help meet demand for advertising in the single State owned commercial station 1ZB, 1YD was authorised to carry low-level commercials read live at the microphone, and by the 1960s transmitter time in Auckland was leased in the mornings to a private commercial operator Radio i, which later secured its own AM channel.
The start of 'pirate' broadcasting in 1966 from Radio Hauraki, based on a barge in the Hauraki Gulf, and the consequent opening up of NZ radio to private investors led to a sharp rise in competition, and the NZBC looked to sharpen up the rather fusty image of its metro stations by re-branding the three YD stations in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch) back to ZM and promoting them under the brand ZM Maxi Music.
The ZM format under NZBC, and from 1975 Radio New Zealand, control evolved through several different musical forms. The ZM disc-jockeys have included controversial broadcaster Paul Holmes. The network has developed from the original three AM radio stations in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch (1ZM, 2ZM and 3ZM) to a nationwide radio station covering 17 markets. Since 1996 ZM has been owned by The Radio Network when the government sold the Radio New Zealand commercial operation.
91ZM Auckland
ZM started in Auckland in 1973 broadcasting on 1251 AM as 1ZM. In 1983, with the approval by the Broadcasting Tribunal to allow two new private radio stations to be the first fully commercial FM stations in Auckland, 1ZM was required to change its format to be an alternative commercial free station, largely to allow the new private stations (Magic 91FM and Triple M 89 FM) to compete successfully for the mainstream contemporary hit radio audience. This was successful, as within 2-3 years 1ZM's market share dropped significantly as young listeners were attracted by the higher quality sound of the FM stations, despite the absence of commercials on 1ZM. 1ZM at the time promoted itself as "Total Music ZM" to emphasise the commercial free format. 1ZM changed format in 1987 to "Classic Hits" to try to recover audience, but was still costing Radio NZ over $1 million per annum to operate as it was the only "commercial station" legally required to run no commercials! The change to the Classic Hits format saw 1ZM drop the ZM name and become Classic Hits Twelve Fifty One. The change in name marked the birth of the Classic Hits Network we know today however the Classic Hits brands was not rolled out to the rest of New Zealand until 1993. Subsequent liberalisation of the broadcasting warrant system (which was ultimately abolished in 1989/1990) saw Radio NZ win a licence to broadcast the station on 97.4FM in Auckland and broadcast commercials, with the 1251 AM frequency licence transferred to Christian broadcaster Radio Rhema. The move to FM saw the station change branding to Classic Hits 97FM. The name change from ZM to Classic Hits saw an absence of the ZM brand in Auckland from 1987 to 1996 when ZM made a return to Auckland as 91ZM taking over the 91.0FM frequency previously used by Magic 91FM and The Breeze 91FM.
ZMFM Wellington
Wellington's 2ZM was the first ZM network station to broadcast in FM from December 21 1985 as ZMFM 91 (90.9), but did not cease to broadcast on AM until 1986 with the introduction of a second frequency on 93.5 to provide adequate FM coverage of the hilly Wellington region. Its AM frequency (1161 kHz) was reallocated to Maori station Te Upoko o Te Ika. Around 1996 ZMFM Wellington became known as 91ZM sharing the same name that had been used in Christchurch and the re-established ZM station in Auckland. In March 2007, ZM altered its Hutt Valley frequency from 93.5 to 90.9, to form a synchronous transmission with the signal from Mt. Kau Kau, also on 90.9. This means commuters no longer have to switch their radio dials between the two frequencies when driving between Wellington and the Hutt Valley.
91ZM Christchurch
ZM launched in Christchurch in 1973 on 1400AM as 3ZM. In a bid to compete against local Christchurch station Radio Avon 3ZM was rebranded as Radio Nova (coincidentally 'Avon' spelt backwards) playing an Easy Listening format similar to that of Radio i in Auckland. Listener interest was strong at first but later ratings dropped and the station was reverted back to 3ZM playing the same music format as that of 1ZM and 2ZM. 3ZM later moved to 1323AM and then in 1986 switched to FM and ceased AM broadcasting several months later. The 1323 kHz frequency was used for Maori broadcasting by Aotearoa Radio in the early 1990s, then by Radio Liberty in the mid 1990s. It is no longer in use by any station in the region. Originally when ZM in Christchurch switched to FM the station was broadcast on 92.9FM used the same 'ZMFM' branding as Wellington and even the same logo. Later ZM moved to 91.3FM and the 92.9FM frequency was used to broadcast C93FM, since 2001 this frequency has been used to broadcast Solid Gold. In 1989 the name was changed to 91 Stereo ZM followed by 91ZM. Today the station is referred to as Canterbury's 91-3ZM. It Broadcasts live from the Worchester Street Studios from 10am-3pm weekdays. Other Times the show is networked from Auckland or Wellington.
91ZM Manawatu
ZM commenced transmission to Manawatu on the 9th of March 1987 on 90.6FM. The program was a relay of the Wellington ZMFM station with local commercial breaks and station identification. ZMFM Manawatu also ran its own breakfast show - "Jackson and The Morning Crew" featuring Pete Jackson. In 1989, 90.6 ZMFM re-branded as 2 Double Q, subsequently dropping the relay of ZMFM Wellington and beginning a seven year absence of the ZM name in Manawatu. The ZM brand did not return to the Manawatu market until 1996 when Classic Rock Q91FM (formerly 2 Double Q) reverted back to ZM (as 91ZM). The new ZM programme created in 1996 used a computerised automation system to provide a local programme recorded minutes before from the Wellington studio, this system remained in place until 2000 when ZM switched to a single network.
93ZM Whangarei (now known as 95-1ZM)
93ZM started around 1995 as a totally local station separate from the rest of the ZM stations. 93ZM became a network station after ZM made a return to Auckland with local content prerecorded in Auckland minutes earlier however the breakfast show was networked from Waikato between 1998 and 1999 when 89.8 ZM Waikato had its own local breakfast show. In 2006, 93ZM traded places on the Northland radio dial with Radio Hauraki, as ZM shifted to 95.1FM and Hauraki took over ZM's vacated 93.2FM frequency. This was the second frequency shift for ZM locally, the first being a change from 93.1 to 93.2FM in 2005.
89.8 ZM Waikato and Bay of Plenty
ZM began broadcasting in the Waikato region around 1996 when The Radio Network acquired the 89.8FM frequency that had been previously been used by local station 898FM or Kiwi FM (no connection to the Kiwi FM stations in operation today) and later The Breeze 89.8FM. 89.8ZM Waikato was networked from Auckland using the same automated computer system to provide a local programme recorded from Auckland minutes earlier. Waikato had its own local breakfast show between 1998 and 1999 but this ceased before 2000 and the Auckland breakfast show took the shows place.
98ZM Rotorua
ZM began broadcasting in Rotorua around 1998 on 98.3FM. This frequency had previously been used by a local rock station called Classic Rock 98.3FM. It is believed that all programming of ZM in Rotorua was originally prerecorded from the Auckland studio until 2000 when ZM switched to a single live network feed.
96ZM Hawkes Bay
ZM started in 1999 in the Hawke's Bay region on the frequency previously used by Greatest Hits FM96, Better Music 96FM, Classic Rock 96FM and later Radio Hauraki. The origins of this frequency date back to 1989 when a former local station 77ZK, converted to FM. 77ZK originally broadcast on 765AM and began life in 1977 as Apple Radio. 77ZK, FM96 and later Classic Rock 96FM all broadcast from studios in Hastings until the mid 1990s when operations were moved to Radio New Zealand's site in Napier. Classic Rock 96FM was rebranded as Radio Hauraki in July 1998, but after less than a year on air, Hauraki was replaced with ZM in March 1999. Radio Hauraki was eventually relaunched three months later on 99.9. 95.9ZM Hawkes Bay has always been based from Auckland, and has a relay station on 99.7FM in Wairoa which has also been on air since 1989.
96ZM Dunedin and Invercargill
ZM began broadcasting on 95.8FM in 1996 with a local programme being produced for the Dunedin region by an announcer in the Christchurch studio. A year later ZM came to Invercargill broadcasting on 95.6FM also based from the Christchurch studio with announcers now prerecording 3 individual voice breaks tailored to each region. While the same songs were played the 3 stations were often out of sync. With the high amount of talk on the breakfast show breakfast was kept to a single show mostly tailored to the Christchurch audience.
98.8ZM Taranaki ZM came to Taranaki in the late nineties broadcasting on 98.8FM and originally like other ZM stations all local content was recorded minutes earlier from the Wellington studio until 2000 when ZM switched to a single network with all content coming from Auckland.
97ZM Nelson
One of the most recent ZM stations, ZM came to Nelson in 2004 replacing a local station owned by The Radio Network The Planet 97FM. Originally The Planet was an independently owned station playing Hot AC music. In 2002 The Radio Network took over The Planet FM and changed the format to match that of ZM and even took on the ZM slogan Today's Hit Music and used similar jingles to ZM. In April 2004 The Planet 97FM became 97ZM with all content coming from the ZM network and The Planet shutting down completely. The Planet FM website redirected to the ZM website until the domain planetfm.co.nz expired and was not renewed.
96-8ZM Wanganui and 96-3ZM South Canterbury
The most recent additions to the ZM network in 2004 both stations are provided in these regions by the Community Radio Network.
The ZM Network
ZM began networking as early as the 1980s between Midnight and 6AM with the ZM All-Nighter based from the 1ZM Auckland studio and played on 2ZM Wellington and 3ZM Christchurch. The ZM All-Nighter was dropped around 1989 when all stations starting operating their own local overnight shows.
While ZM operated 3 separate networks during the late nineties some shows were played during this time across all ZM stations based from the Auckland studios. ZM operated an afternoon countdown show called the ZM Essential 30 between 1996 and 1999 based from Auckland and featured some of the best bits of each Breakfast show as well as the weekly countdown. ZM also ran the Sample G Club Mix between 1997 and 2003 on Saturday nights based from Auckland. A nationwide night show based from Auckland was started in 1999. A single toll free contest phone number was introduced in 1998 with listeners calling the same number regardless of the ZM station being listened to, the number was originally 0508 342596 (0508 DIALZM) but this changed to an 0800 number in 2000.
In 2000 ZM changed to a single network format, all ZM stations in smaller regions became part of this network based from Auckland the only regions not originally affected were Christchurch and Wellington where these stations remained local except during the evenings and overnight where ZM ran a nationwide night show. ZM branding also changed where the station was simply branded as ZM instead of including the frequency number in the branding such as 91ZM, 96ZM, 98ZM. At first, these changes were not popular and many listeners chose to listen to alternative stations.
In 2001 more changes were made and this time saw Christchurch and Wellington integrated into the network. The Christchurch studio was closed all together with some announcers being moved to Auckland to produce a nationwide show for all of New Zealand. Wellington ZM remained local but the local breakfast show went nationwide broadcast from Wellington, at first some breakfast show content in Wellington varied to the rest of the country but by 2002 the ZM Morning Crew was a single show. The breakfast show on ZM still comes from the Wellington studio today.
The decision for ZM to make the major changes in 2000 and 2001 were cost saving changes. The original ZM network based from 3 different studios and providing what appeared to the listener as a local programme was costly and required 14 data lines leased from Telecom in order to create the link between smaller regions and the main studios. A cheaper alternative was for ZM to lease bandwidth on the TVNZ data line used to carry TV1 and TV2 across New Zealand, however this option required ZM to operate from a single location. The decision to close the Christchurch studio was simply because the ZM Christchurch breakfast show could not compete with the Si and Phil's breakfast show on More FM and it was best to axe the show. The breakfast show in Wellington was (and still is) a top rating breakfast show in the Wellington region so it made sense to make this a nationwide show. At first the rest of New Zealand didn't conside the Wellington breakfast show to have the same entertainment value but today ZM breakfast is the most listened to music breakfast in Auckland as well as Wellington.
In 2002 branding was once again changed to include the local frequency but now the whole frequency instead of just the first two numbers, so in Dunedin ZM was now known as 95-8ZM and in Christchurch ZM was known as 91-3ZM. Announcers still address the station as ZM except when a local programme is being produced. In 2003 the amount of local content on ZM in Wellington was reduced to just during the week and after Drive-Time announcer Julian Burn left ZM Wellington he was not replaced but instead Stables show was networked into Wellington.
In 2005 the ZM Christchurch studio was reopened and now ZM is local in Christchurch during the Daytime (10am - 3pm) show. The Daytime announcer in Auckland produces two separate shows simultaneously, one for Auckland and another for the rest of the ZM Network. Any show can be done from either Auckland, Wellington or Christchurch studios (and often is). All ZM stations play the same songs in the same sequence even when a local show is being played in Christchurch and Wellington.
When ZM was owned by Radio New Zealand, the station would use the Radio New Zealand News service played on all stations operated by Radio New Zealand. Typically news was played on the hour every hour and half hourly during the breakfast show. When the Radio New Zealand Commercial arm was sold to The Radio Network the news service on ZM and other stations was replaced with The Radio Networks own news service. In 1997 ZM stations began reducing news breaks to only play on the breakfast show, this was at time when stations began increasing the amount of music played in an hour and reducing talk. In 2000 ZM started their own news service called ZM Newsbeat. The Newsbeat service is a quick News report with a beat in the background followed by a local weather forecast prerecorded from the Auckland or Wellington studio for each individual region. There used to be a local Newsbeat for Wellington during the morning show, but this was replaced by the national edition in early 2006. Today the content is derived from the Newstalk ZB newsroom.
The ZM Online website was finally launched in March 2002 3 years after the zmonline.co.nz and zmonline.com domains were registered, previously going to these sites would display a notice saying a new site would be here in a week for over a year, this followed by a page with details of competitions. Announcers have had email addresses using the zmonline.com domain since 1999. 91ZM Wellington ran their own website at 91zm.co.nz prior to this but this domain pointed to the ZM Online site after 2002. 96ZM Dunedin and 93ZM Whangarei also ran their own sites at 96zm.co.nz and 93zm.co.nz between 1998 and 1999. The ZM Online website was the first radio stations websites in New Zealand to display the name of the song playing on the air.
In 2002 ZM became one of the first radio stations in New Zealand to introduce a text service where listeners can send an SMS Text Message to the studio, this has become an essential way for listeners to interact with the announcers on the air as well as voting for polls and music, requests and an easy way to comment on any thing said on the air. A unique feature of the ZM text service is that listeners can use it to find out the name of the song playing on the air by texting the word SONG, currently no other radio station in New Zealand offers such a feature. The Club ZM text number is 9696.
ZM and ZM announcers have won the following awards in recent years:
- Best Music Breakfast Host or Hosts (Metropolitan): The ZM Morning Crew
- Best Non-Breakfast Host or Hosts (Metropolitan): Stables, ZM Network
- Best Promotion of a Radio Station (Networks): Live Rent Free – Christian Boston & Kate McGowan, ZM Network
- Best Client Promotion: Telecom 3 Minute Hour – Leanne Hutchinson, ZM Network
- Best Promotional Or Image Trailer for a Radio Station: Carrot Fest – Chris Nicoll, ZM
- Also Special Commendation goes to ZM Programme Director, Christian Boston in the category of Programmer of the Year.
- Best New Broadcaster: Sarah Gandy, 91ZM Auckland and ZM Network
- Best Promotional Or Image Trailer for a Radio Station: One Hit Wonder-U2 - Chris Nicoll, ZM Network
- Station Imaging: ZM Network Imaging - Chris Nicoll, ZM
- Commercial or Trailers: One Hit Wonder, U2 - Chris Nicoll, ZM
- Special Commendation went to announcer Sarah Gandy for the ZM Sealed Section in the category Best Daily Or Weekly Series
- Best Non-Breakfast Music Personality: Nicki Sunderland – ZM Network
- Special Commendation went to ZM Programme Director Grant Hislop in the category Programmer of the Year.
- Best Music & Entertainment Teams - Metropolitan: The Morning Crew Grant Kereama, Pauline Gillespie & Nick Tansley - 91ZM, Wellington
- Best New Broadcaster: Natalie Crook - 91ZM, Auckland
- Best Promotion Of A Radio Station: 91ZM Carols By Candlelight - Nick Tansley 91ZM, Wellington
- Best Individual Air Personality, Talk Host Or Interviewer - Metropolitan: Kerrie-Maree Adams - 91ZM, Wellington (Joint Winner alongside Paul Holmes from Newstalk ZB).
- Best Radio Commercial - Radio Station Writers Or Staff: "Hooked" - Rachel Hunt & Darin To'o, 91ZM, Wellington
- Best Promotion Of A Radio Station: Get A Life - Dean Buchanan, 91ZM, Christchurch
- Metropolitan Station of the Year: 91ZM, Christchurch
- Special Commendation went to 91ZM Christchurch, Programme Directors, Craig Boddy & David Dalkin in the category Programmer of the Year.
ZM has used the following slogans in the past:
c1985 - c1988:
- Hit Radio ZMFM (Wellington, Christchurch and Manawatu)
c1988 - c1988:
- More Music ZMFM (Manawatu only)
c1988 - c1990:
- The Music Leader ZMFM (Wellington and Manawatu only)
c1988 - c1990:
- 91 Stereo ZM (Christchurch only)
1991 - 1994:
- Rock of the Nineties ZMFM (Wellington only)
1991 - 1994:
- Rock of the Nineties 91ZM (Christchurch only)
1994 - 1997:
- Just Great Music of the 80's and 90's
1997 - Present:
- Today's Hit Music
ZM plays mostly pop, rock, dance music in the current Top 40. In 2003 ZM added to its playlist older (mainly 1990's) popular rock, pop and dance music tracks, in the form of the High School Hit. This being done to cater for a more diverse demographic. Also every day at midday ZM switches onto Shuffle and 10 random songs in a row from the 1990s (and at times 1980's) as well as newer music is played. In the past many listeners have had the perception of ZM being a Teeny Bopper station playing only pop music young teenage listeners would enjoy, this mainly from listeners of The Rock, however today ZM regularly plays certain tracks from very popular rock bands such as AC/DC, Metallica, Pearl Jam, Guns N' Roses, Nirvana, Bon Jovi and many more. Rival station The Edge plays similar Top 40 music but has more hip hop on their playlist where ZM has more dance music on their playlist and The Edge does not play the selection of older music that is played on ZM.
The ZM Morning Crew (6am - 10am)
- Pauline Gillespie (Polly)
- Grant Kereama
- Marc Peard (known as "New hot Guy") - Show producer.
- Cam Bisley - "Out and About Guy"
Workday (10am - 3pm)
- Sarah Gandy (Auckland & Network Regions)
- Simon O'Neill (Wellington)
- Bridget Howard (Christchurch)
Drive (3pm - 7pm)
- Iain Stables (Stables) - Show host.
- Paul Flynn (Flynny) - Show producer.
- Jason Winstanley (Staino)
Nights (Sun-Fri 7pm - 12am)
- Mark Dye - Show host Mon-Fri.
- Paul Stenhouse - Sunday evening presenter.
Show features the "ZM 20" countdown at 8PM followed by "Mix Tape" (an all request show)
Overnights (12am - 6am)
Friday Nights (10pm - 2:30am)
- General Lee mix show with DJ General Lee
Saturday Mornings (7am - 10am)
- Stu Tolan
- Paul Flynn (Flynny)
Saturday Lunch (10am - 2pm)
- Aroha Hathaway (Auckland & Network Regions)
- Simon O'Neill (Wellington)
- Bridget Howard (Christchurch)
Saturday Afternoons (2pm - 5pm)
The Stables Rump 30 countdown with:
Saturday Nights (5pm - 6am)
- Presented by Paul Stenhouse from 5pm-10pm, with 200 songs in a row commercial free beginning at 7:00.
- The General Lee Mix Show from 10pm, continuing the 200 songs in a row.
Sunday Mornings (7am - 12pm)
- Luke Weston (Breakfast)
- Bridget Hastie (Drivetime Show & Weekends)
- Paul Stenhouse (Weekends)
- Programme Director - Christian Boston (Bosto)
- Music Director - Jason Winstanley (Staino)
| Announcer | Show | Duration | Reason for leaving | Last known station |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sandy Antipas | ZMFM Wellington Mid dawns, 91ZM Christchurch floater while at Radio School then Wellington 91ZM afternoon drive,93ZM Northland breakfast co-hosted by Jaala Dyer 89.8ZM Waikato Breakfast co-hosted by Jaala Dyer | 1990 - 1999 | Show replaced with Auckland based network product in 2000 | The Breeze Wellington |
| Natalie Beran | Weekend Announcer | 2000 - 2002 | Went overseas | AM730Traffic, Vancouver, Canada |
| Dan Bernstone | ZM Newsbeat Reader and Fill in Announcer | 2002 - 2007 | Moved to More FM Christchurch | Daytime Host on More FM Christchurch |
| Natalie Crook | 91ZM Breakfast Producer then Breakfast co host with Marcus Lush in 2000 | Until 2001 | Moved to Classic Hits Taranaki Breakfast | TVNZ Journalist |
| Simon Barnett | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by Phil Gifford | Until 1997 | Both Simon and Phil Gifford were offered a large sum of money to work on More FM Christchurch | More FM Christchurch Breakfast show |
| Julian Burn | 91ZM Wellington Drivetime show | Until 2003 | Moved overseas show was replaced with network show. | Breakfast on More FM Hawkes Bay |
| Lana Coc-kroft | 91ZM Auckland and ZM Network Daytime Show co-host with Nicki Sunderland | Until 2002 | Now unemployed was involved in the Celebrity Drug Scandal in 2005 along with Marc Ellis | |
| James Daniels | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by Ken Ellis | Both James and Ken Ellis were offered a large sum of money to work on More FM Christchurch | Managing TRN's Flava Radio Network | |
| Jaala Dyer | 89.8ZM Waikato Breakfast co-hosted by Sandy Antipas | 1998 - 1999 | Show replaced with Auckland based network product in 2000 | |
| Ken Ellis | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by James Daniels | Both Ken and James Daniels were offered a large sum of money to work on More FM Christchurch | Local Newsreader for Newstalk ZB Christchurch. | |
| Phil Gifford | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by Simon Barnett | Until 1997 | Both Phil and Simon Barnett were offered a large sum of money to work on More FM Christchurch | Left More FM in 2003 and worked on Radio Sport for some time following this. |
| Dallas Gurney | 93ZM Whangarei Nights (1995-1996), 91ZM Wellington Nights (1996-1998), 91ZM Christchurch Drivetime (1998) | Until 1998 | Left Christchurch to take a programming position at ZM in Auckland. Still filled in at weekends. | TRN Talent Manager. |
| Aroha Hathaway | 91ZM Wellington Daytime (until 2003) and ZM Network Daytime (2003-05) | Until 2005 | Left to go to Māori Television | Still presents in weekends, also presents Advertorials on TV One's Good Morning show, and drivetime host on Waatea in Auckland. |
| Mark Hewlett | The Fear Factor Champion was an extra on ZM working alongside Polly and Grant. | 2004 | ||
| Melanie Homer | 91ZM Auckland Nightshow and later 10 - 2 show | 1998 - 1999 | Went to live in Hong Kong | Breakfast Newsreader for Classic Hits |
| Tim Homer | 91ZM Auckland and ZM Network Drivetime | Until 2000 | Show axed due to restructuring, Jason Royal was moved to Auckland to take over this show. | Programming More FM Auckland |
| Jacqui Jensen | ZM Night show co-host with Stu Tolan, then sole presenter | 2003-2007 | Moved to Australia | |
| Grant Kearney (DJ Sample G) | Mixer for the ZM Clubmix (Nationwide) | 1997 - 2003 | Friday Nights on George FM | |
| Marcus Lush | 91ZM Auckland Breakfast and ZM Network Breakfast | 1996 - 2001 | Moved to Newstalk ZB after Wellington Breakfast show was made the network breakfast show | Breakfast on Foveaux FM Southland until 2004 and Radio Live from 2005. |
| Mike McClung | 91ZM Auckland and ZM Network Drivetime | Until 2000 | Show axed due to restructuring, Jason Royal was moved to Auckland to take over this show. | Working for NZ On Air |
| Willy MacAlister | 91ZM Christchurch Night show and ZM Nationwide Nightshow | Until 1999 | Moved to Channel Z when it was still local in Christchurch and later to Sydney. | Programming Nova 969 |
| Andrew Mulligan | Co-host of the "Reeves and Mull" weekend breakfast show with Jason Reeves. | 2005-2006 | Left when his co-host Jason Reeves moved to Classic Hits. | Presenter on Prime TV |
| Linda Nelson | ZM Network Newsreader & Breakfast Co-host on the Marcus Lush Breakfast | Until 2003 | Italy | |
| Breffni O'Rourke | 91ZM Christchurch Daytime | 1998 - 2001 | Moved to Classic Hits 90FM Nelson Breakfast after ZM Christchurch studio was closed in 2001. | Worked on various stations after leaving ZM such as Breakfast on 4XO Dunedin (before being rebranded as More FM) and most recently Breakfast on Nelson's More FM until 2007. |
| Justin Rae | 91ZM Wellington day announcer (until 2000), ZM Network fill-in announcer (after 2000) | 1996 - 2006 | Moved back to Wellington to work on More FM | More FM Wellington Breakfast show |
| Val Robinson | 91ZM Christchurch Daytime | Until 1998 | ||
| Jason Royal | 91ZM Christchurch Drivetime (1997 - 2001), extra on Christchurch Breakfast show in 1998 and ZM Network Drivetime (2001 - 2003) | 1997 - 2003 | Moved back to Christchurch to work on More FM | Daytime show on More FM Christchurch |
| Jason Reeves | Co-host of the "Reeves and Mull" weekend breakfast show with Andrew Mulligan. | 2005 - 2006 | Moved to Classic Hits Network Drive | Drivetime show on Classic Hits Network |
| Chuckie Shearer | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast working with Rik and Katrina | 1997 - 1998 | Moved to Classic Hits Christchurch | |
| Dave Smart | 93ZM Whangarei Drive, then breakfast, later Network Announcer | 1996 - 2004 | Moved to Classic Hits Network Nights | Breakfast Host on Classic Hits 90FM Wellington |
| Katrina Smith | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by Rik van Dyke | 1997 - 2001 | Offered a job co-hosting breakfast with Rik on Classic Hits 97.7 Christchurch after the Wellington Breakfast show was networked into Christchurch, however turned it down. | Daytime show on Nelson's Fifeshire FM (now More FM). |
| Geoff Stagg | ZM Network Nightshow | 1999 - 2002 | Contract Terminated due to low ratings | Drive announcer on More FM Wellington |
| Heather Stove | Stables Newsbeat Reader & On Show Contributor | 2004 -2006 | ||
| Nicky Sunderland | 91ZM Auckland Daytime and ZM Network Daytime | Until 2002 | Went on maternity leave for six months only to find her job had been taken over by Stables. | Night time Love Songs show on The Breeze Auckland |
| Nick Tansley | 91ZM Wellington Breakfast and ZM Network Breakfast with Polly and Grant. | Until 2003 | Contract not renewed due to show restructuring | More FM Wellington Breakfast show |
| Rik van Dyke | 91ZM Christchurch Breakfast co-hosted by Katrina Smith | 1997 - 2001 | Moved to Classic Hits 97.7 Christchurch Breakfast after the Wellington Breakfast show was networked in Christchurch | Classic Hits 97.7 Christchurch Breakfast and later Daytime show until 2006 and now Program Director for The Breeze Christchurch. |
| City/Town | Frequency | |
|---|---|---|
| Whangarei | 95.1FM | |
| Auckland | 91.0FM | |
| Waikato | 89.8FM | |
| Bay of Plenty | 89.8FM | |
| Rotorua | 98.3FM | |
| Gisborne | 107.4FM & 107.7FM | |
| Taranaki | 98.8FM | |
| Hawke's Bay | 95.9FM & 99.7FM | |
| Wanganui | 96.8FM | |
| Manawatu | 90.6FM | |
| Kapiti Coast | 91.1FM | |
| Wellington | 90.9FM | |
| Blenheim | 90.5FM | |
| Nelson | 97.0FM | |
| Christchurch/Canterbury & Sumner | 91.3FM & 89.2FM | |
| South Canterbury | 96.3FM | |
| Dunedin | 95.8FM | |
| Southland | 95.6FM | |
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|---|---|
| Radio New Zealand | Radio New Zealand National · Radio New Zealand Concert · AM Network |
| The Radio Network | Classic Hits FM · Coast · Flava · Newstalk ZB · Radio Hauraki · Radio Sport · Viva FM · ZM |
| MediaWorks NZ | BSport · Kiwi FM · More FM · Radio Live · Solid Gold · The Edge · The Rock · The Breeze |
| Rhema Broadcasting Group | Life FM · New Zealand's Rhema · Southern Star |
| Independent Networks | George FM · Mai FM · Port FM |



