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WBBO (98.5 FM, "B98-5") is a radio station broadcasting a Contemporary Hit Radio format. Licensed to Ocean Acres, New Jersey, it serves Ocean & Burlington counties in New Jersey. It first Sign-on On March 10, 1993. 1993 under the call sign WQNJ, but more recently operated under WKMK. The station is currently owned by Press Communications. [3]
Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; WAJM: 88.9 FM: Atlantic City: Atlantic City Board of Education: Freeform/Educational WAWZ: 99.1 FM: Zarephath
On January 7, 2008, 920 dropped the sports format and returned to WCHR's religious programming as the 1040 facility was converted into WNJE, a simulcast of ESPN Radio's New York City station, WEPN. [2] The WNJE studios are at the Townsquare Media office in Ewing, co-located with the studios for New Jersey 101.5, 94.5 WPST and 1040 WCHR
Callsign Frequency City of license WPAC: 98.7 FM: Ogdensburg, New York: WPAE: 89.7 FM: Centreville, Mississippi: WPAI: 90.7 FM: Nanty Glo, Pennsylvania: WPAK-FM: 106.9 FM
On August 17, 2018, the station's WGBG-FM call sign and format moved from 98.5 FM to WKHI 107.7 FM Fruitland, MD, and 98.5 continued to simulcast 107.7 under a new WKHI call sign, until a new format was announced. [2] The station changed its call sign again on August 24, 2018, to WUSX. On September 17, 2018, WUSX split from its simulcast with ...
WSNJ (1240 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Bridgeton, New Jersey. It is owned by SNJ Today, LLC, and it airs a full-service adult contemporary radio format, featuring hits from the 1980s, 90s and early 2000s. WSNJ is powered at 1,000 watts and its transmitter is off South Burlington Road in Upper Deerfield Township. [2]
WCHR-FM is the most powerful FM station in the Monmouth/Ocean market and can be heard as far west as the city of Philadelphia and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, as far north as Wall Township, New Jersey, and as far south as Ocean City. [citation needed] The WCHR-FM antenna is co-located with 92.7 WOBM-FM and 104.1 W281CK on a tower located in ...
The five stations previously belonged to New Jersey Network's statewide radio service. [2] WHYY assumed control of the stations through a management agreement on July 1, 2011, pending Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval for the acquisition; at that point, the stations began to carry the WHYY-FM schedule.