History
1997–2014: Phantom
Until 2003, Phantom operated as a pirate station, staying on air the majority of the time, apart from outages caused by frequency collisions with newly licensed stations, fear of raids by Comreg, and once, the theft of their transmission equipment from Three Rock Mountain. Since 2003, they have operated as an internet radio station, and under two temporary radio contracts (2003 and 2004) from the Broadcasting Commission of Ireland. Funding for Phantom during their pirate era came from sponsorship and advertising from local bands and promoters and even contributions from station staff. A number of times during this period, the station went off air for licence applications. After two successful temporary licenses, Phantom applied for an alternative rock license offered by the BCI for Dublin in July 2004. They finally won a licence for an alternative rock station for Dublin in November 2004, beating the Zed FM consortium,2014: Job cuts and restructuring plans
On 14 February 2014, the board of directors of Dublin Rock Radio Ltd, trading as Phantom 105.2 announced that up to twenty staff would be made redundant. In a statement issued to the press, managers of the station said that the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland had granted permission to restructure the business "in order to ensure its long-term viability". In February 2014, it was announced that an agreement had been reached with the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland to restructure the station resulting in the loss of many full and part-time staff with the exception of a handful of presenters. The station would then be rebranded as TXFM with closer operational links with Today FM, also owned by Communicorp and who also broadcast from the same building. On 16 March 2014 the station ceased broadcasting as Phantom 105.2. The last live show was Power House presented by John Caddell. Back to back music was then broadcast with the station being renamed ''105.2'' with no reference to Phantom. A number of on-air, backroom and support staff lost their jobs.2014–2016: As TXFM
It was subsequently confirmed that TXFM would relaunch on 31 March 2014, with a mix of existing and new presenters. Initially, it was announced that only three of the daytime presenters would be left. In the event, more presenters were kept on. Presenters who kept their positions included John Caddell, going from weekday to weekend but appointed as PD for TXFM, Nadine O'Regan, Orlagh Donnelly, Derek Byrne, Joe Donnelly, Claire Beck, Dee Reddy, Cathal Funge, and Kelly-Anne Byrne. The latter two went from being part-time presenters on Phantom to full-time presenters on TXFM. Charlotte Flood is a broadcasting assistant on Today FM. She was reinstated on TXFM in 2015. A number of new weekend and once a weeknight presenters were included in the new schedule, including musician Gavin Glass who went on to Radio NOVA. The new lineup would see presented programmes from 7am to midnight on weekdays, including nightly two-hour specialist shows from 10pm; weekends would see a mix of presenter-led and specialist shows, including a Saturday night 'indie anthems' marathon. On 30 March 2016 the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland announced that no applications had been received for the license held by Dublin Rock Radio Limited, broadcasting as TXFM. Some of the station's specialist content such as The Set-List, Metal March, TXFM Evenings, The Pick-Up, Souled Out, Transmission, Nialler 9, Friday Nights, The Listening Post and Another Side were axed from the station at the end of June 2016, while Songs in the Key of Life with Nadine O'Regan made the transition from its slot on TXFM to sister station Today FM which is also a national radio station. From July 2016, the stations schedule was reduced to only a few hours of live content each day with the majority of the schedule made up of automated songs.Closure
The station ceased broadcasting on Wednesday, 26 October 2016 at 20:12h with the full 14 minutes 57 seconds of Pulp's "The Day After The Revolution" as the final song. The JNLR radio figures released that week showed that in its final three months on air, the station's listenership had actually increased from 16,000 (Q2 2016) to 19,000 (Q3 2016).Relaunch
Communicorp Media launched an alternative indie digital radio station called Today XM paying homage to TXFM on May 17, 2018. The digital radio stations logo is similar to TXFM and plays a similar playlist however the station has no regular shows or presenters. Initially, Today FM confirmed each of the new digital radio stations would host specialist podcasts however they have yet to become a reality. Today XM is available through TodayFM.COM and through digital radio streaming services. A number of former Phantom and TXFM staff remain linked with Today FM both on and off mic.Awards
* PPI Music Driven Local Station Of The Year (2007) * Digital Media Awards – Best Entertainment Content (Web/Mobile) (2008) * Irish Web Awards – Best Radio Station Website (2008 & 2009) * Highly Commended in the Allianz Business to Arts Awards 2010 (Best Sponsorship of an Event) * PPI New Irish Music/Musical Talent Programming (2013) Icon – Songwriter Special * PPI Awards 2016 - Left of the Dial Documentary by Cathal Funge.References
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