Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
WHYY-FM (90.9 MHz, "91 FM") is a public radio station licensed to serve Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.Its broadcast tower is located in the city's Roxborough section of the city at (2] while its studios and offices are located on Independence Mall in Center City Philadelphia
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; KDKA: 1020 AM: Pittsburgh: Audacy License, LLC: News/Talk: KDKA-FM: 93.7 FM: Pittsburgh: Audacy License, LLC
WPEN (97.5 MHz, "97.5 The Fanatic") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Burlington, New Jersey, in the Philadelphia radio market.The station is owned by the Beasley Broadcast Group through licensee Beasley Media Group, LLC and broadcasts a sports radio format.
In the early 1950s, WPEN became one of the pioneers of late night live audience talk radio. Steve Allison, formerly of Boston, was host of a five or six nights a week radio show from 11:30 pm–2:00 am. This show was broadcast from the "Ranch Room" restaurant on the station's ground floor building on Walnut Street between 22nd and 23rd streets.
Live radio is sound transmitted by radio waves, as the sound happens. Modern live radio is probably [original research?] most used to broadcast sports but it is also used to transmit local news and traffic updates. Most radio that people listen to today is pre-recorded music, and the days of solely live broadcast music are generally not as present.
KYW (1060 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to serve Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.It is one of the oldest continuously operating radio stations in the United States, originating in Chicago before moving to Philadelphia in 1934.
The live Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts are listenable every Saturday during its broadcast season, which typically runs from early December through the early May. These broadcasts may be accessed via hundreds of radio stations worldwide (the official website provides a station finder), or via free live streaming Internet transmission on ...
The Liberty Broadcasting System operated solely through recreations of games, because live games were too expensive. [24] Gordon McLendon broadcast games throughout the South from 1948 until 1952, when new blackout regulations forced him to stop. [21] [25] [26] The Mutual Broadcasting System also broadcast a Game of the Day in the 1950s. [21] [27]