Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
WEND (106.5 FM) – branded 106.5 The End – is a commercial alternative rock radio station licensed to Salisbury, North Carolina, serving primarily the Charlotte metropolitan area, as well as parts of the Piedmont Triad.
Charlotte: Radio One of North Carolina, LLC: Urban contemporary WFNZ-FM: 92.7 FM: Harrisburg: Radio One of North Carolina, LLC: Sports (ISN) WFOZ-LP: 105.1 FM: Winston-Salem: Forsyth Technical Community College: Variety WFQS: 91.3 FM: Franklin: Western North Carolina Public Radio: Classical music/news/talk WFSC: 1050 AM: Franklin: Sutton ...
The End of Summer Weenie Roast is an alternative rock festival annually in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States, at the PNC Music Pavilion. The festival was founded by the local modern alternative rock radio station, WEND. It happens some time in September to celebrate the end of summer.
WSTP is an AM station associated with Catawba College and training students for broadcasting careers. Co-owned with WSAT, the station went dark on August 30, 2016, citing signal issues. iHeartMedia-owned alternative rock radio station WEND (New Rock 106.5 The End) is licensed to Salisbury; its transmitter is located in China Grove.
The following is a list of full-power radio stations, ... North Carolina: Charlotte WHQC-HD2: 96.1-2: Shelby: North Carolina: Charlotte: WRCM-HD2: 91.9-2: Wingate:
WGIV (1370 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Pineville, North Carolina, and serving the Charlotte metropolitan area. It airs an mainstream urban radio format. WGIV is owned by Frank Neely, but the station is operated by Steve Hedgwood's Core Communications, which owns a similar trimulcast in Atlanta of W233BF, WIPK and WFDR.
It was the second FM station to begin broadcasting in Charlotte after 106.7 WMIT, which signed on in 1941. (Because WMIT moved to Black Mountain, North Carolina, in the 1960s, WSOC-FM can claim it is now Charlotte's oldest FM station.) WSOC-FM originally was powered at 38,000 watts, a third of its current output.
The classification of urban-formatted radio stations range from the radio formats of rhythmic contemporary hit radio to Urban contemporary gospel. Though urban contemporary was the originator of the format, there have come to be many variations of the format in the last 30 years.