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In January 2011, WTKK dropped Imus from the lineup completely in favor of an extended edition of the local late morning team of Jim Braude and Margery Eagan. [17] WTKK fired the controversial Jay Severin, a host since 1999, in April 2011 after he said he had slept with female interns at a company he had owned, and defended the practice. [18]
Margery Eagan (born June 13, 1954) is a talk radio host and a frequent guest on CNN, ABC, Fox News, and the Imus in the Morning radio show. For many years she was a columnist for the Boston Herald. [1] Subjects of her commentaries include gender/women's issues, Catholicism, and politics.
At that time, KQRB debuted an urban format consisting of a mix of hip-hop, R&B, and old school music branded as "96.9 The Beat", which launched with 1,969 songs commercial free, with "In the Stone" by Earth, Wind & Fire being the first song played.
All three candidates participated in the debates. The first was held on the Jim & Margery show in Boston on January 5, and broadcast by WTKK. The January 8 debate was held in Springfield, Massachusetts and originating at WGBY-TV's studios, aired by them and its sister WGBH-TV-FM stations in Boston.
WMJJ-HD2 – 104.1 The Beat – Mainstream urban; WUHT – Hot 107.7 – Urban adult contemporary; WERC-HD2 – Hallelujah 105.1 – Urban contemporary gospel; WERC-HD3 – B106.5 – Urban adult contemporary; WDXB-HD2/W224CK - Birmingham's BIN 92.7 - Black-oriented news
KEBT (96.9 FM "La Caliente 96.9") is a radio station licensed to Lost Hills, California, United States.The station is owned by American General Media of California. [3] The station airs a Regional Mexican music format.
The station first took the callsign WLMN on August 23, 1991 and changed it to WWUZ on August 10, 1998. WWUZ officially launched in October 1998 with a Classic rock format.
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