RX Radio says that it is its mission is to spread positivity, create awareness around health conditions, share important news stories and provide entertainment around the clock to comfort its many listeners in hospital wards and public spaces in South Africa and around the globe.
"We hope to inspire self-confidence and allow our reporters to dream beyond their circumstances and have kept hope alive for countless patients who have tuned into
RX Radio," adds Noluyolo Ngomani, station manager at
RX Radio.
Keeping RX Radio on the air
According to the station, as individuals commemorate Disability Awareness Month — an occasion that greatly aligns with
RX Radio's mission — the station shared that it is facing a predicament; a shortfall in funding that could take them off the air for the first time in five years.
RX Radio says that it needs raising R2.2-million by the end of the year to secure its operational costs for the next 12 months and take care of its team, which consists of:
- four full-time staff members
- an intern
- a mentor, and
- volunteers who work behind the scenes to make the magic happen.
With the launch of a crowdfunding campaign on BackaBuddy,
RX Radio adds that it hopes to receive donations from its loyal listeners, philanthropists, open-hearted members of the public and compassionate corporates, which will allow the station to be more sustainable for generations to come.
The Legacy of RX Radio
RX Radio broadcasts 24 / 7, providing live and pre-recorded programmes (including shows, music, podcasts and radio diaries) to its young listeners.
Since 2016,
RX Radio has trained 135 children and young reporters between the ages of four and 18, who are curious about the field of radio broadcasting. For example, Talitha Counter, an 18-year-old reporter who contracted Meningoencephalitis as a baby. Counter joined
RX Radio as a reporter when she was only 12 years old.
Counter says that she is a proud
RX Radio reporter and the first young reporter living with a health condition to be inducted as a
Bright Star at the
South African Radio Awards, which will be taking place on Saturday, 26 November in Johannesburg.
Counter adds, "
RX Radio has taught me leadership and communication skills in terms of being able to handle my show and knowing how to interact with guests. In my first training at
RX Radio, I was taught that listening skills are essential in the radio industry and that paying careful attention to your guests is needed."
Counter concludes, "I applied the leadership skills that I was taught at
RX Radio in school as well, because I am a prefect, RCL and the deputy head girl. I want to pursue radio as a career because ever since I started at
RX Radio I found my passion. Radio allows my voice to be heard."
Since the launch of
RX Radio’s crowdfunding campaign, over R 13 000 has been raised through contributions from 16 donors hoping to keep the station running.
Individuals can support
RX Radio on
BackaBuddy. Alternatively, individuals can donate via
Snapscan.
For more information, visit
www.rxradio.co.za. You can also follow
RX Radio on
Facebook,
Twitter or on
Instagram.