Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The move left CBS Radio's KZZO as the only hot AC station in Sacramento, but new competition arose when Entercom dropped rhythmic adult contemporary for hot AC on KBZC the following week. After two years with news/talk, Clear Channel decided to switch the frequencies of KFBK-FM and KHLX (93.1 FM) on December 26, 2013.
KOMA (AM) continued its simulcast of its FM sister until February 2003, when it was decided that the 50,000-watt AM station would better serve the public as a news/talk outlet, now known as KOKC. On July 15, 2012, Ty and Tony Tyler's Tyler Media entered into an agreement with Renda Broadcasting to purchase that company's Oklahoma City radio ...
WFNX and WWBZ (the former WTUB) dropped the WXRV simulcast in May 2014 and began stunting with a wide range of music while preparing to launch new formats for the stations on June 9, with listeners being asked to vote on which of the songs being played should be included in the new formats. [17] [18]
XHRM became one of the first stations in the U.S. to regularly play Freestyle songs [dubious – discuss] as a part of their playlist. The combination of Latin-based Freestyle songs along with the station's original mainstream R&B sound was a success and was the station's signature for the decade.
WBEE-FM (92.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Rochester, New York.It airs a country music radio format and is owned by Audacy, Inc. (formerly Entercom Communications), after being acquired from Sinclair Broadcasting in 1999.
KKSE-FM (92.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Broomfield, Colorado, and serving the Denver metropolitan area and Northern Colorado.KKSE-FM airs a sports talk format branded as "Altitude Sports 92.5 FM."
Later, Clear Channel moved that station to 100.3 FM, with the call sign WQRV. Clear Channel is now called iHeartMedia, Inc. The station changed hands again in April 2006, as part of a two-station deal that also included WXQW. [8] Cumulus Media, the current owner, paid $3.3 million for the two stations. 92.5 became WVNN-FM on April 6, 2006. [1]
KREM-TV carried ABC and DuMont Television Network programming at first, but today is a CBS Network affiliate. In the 1950s and 1960s, when few people owned FM radios, KREM-FM simulcast the AM station's programming. In 1958, KREM-AM-FM-TV were acquired by the Seattle-based King Broadcasting Company.