[3] The final Dig Music broadcast was a 48-hour loop of 13 different versions of "Express Yourself" by N.W.A, including covers by the Audreys, Darren Hanlon and Wagons.
It included programs staffed by historic personalities such as Mikey Robins and Helen Razer, Angela Catterns, Chris & Craig, Roy & HG, and rebroadcasts of the original station's first hour on the air, and Midnight Oil's 1985 "Oils on the Water" concert on Goat Island (which was part of the station's 10th anniversary).
[7] In March 2022, a group of female Australian singer-songwriters wrote to federal communications minister Paul Fletcher and shadow communications minister Michelle Rowland requesting that Double J be granted an FM licence to enable the station to have a broader reach by allowing it to expand into regional areas of the country.
[8] In response, Rowland and shadow arts minister Tony Burke said moving Double J onto the FM band would be a positive step for Australian music.
[10] Albanese declared: “I want more people in regional Australia to experience the joy I have of listening to Double J, singing along to songs they love or maybe discovering something new.
Long-running music director of Triple J, Richard Kingsmill, hosted a program from 2016–2023 called The Funhouse which was one of Double J's longest-running specialty shows at over 350 episodes.