Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On October 9, 2000, the station changed its call sign to the current WKZA, [3] the call sign made popular by a now-defunct AM station in nearby Kane, Pennsylvania. However, the station did not sign on until late November 2000. The station's first format was a stunt, airing continuous Christmas music.
The following is a list of radio stations owned by Cumulus Media. As of 2022, ... WAPI – 1070 – News/talk (simulcast of WZRR) [3] WJOX – 690 – Sports [4]
KTFW-FM (92.1 FM, branded as "Hank FM") is a country music radio station focusing on serving the western half of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex.Licensed to Glen Rose, Texas, United States, it strongly emphasizes classic, traditional, and neotraditional country music.
The station was assigned the call sign WMCZ on December 3, 1985, and, on January 9, 1986, changed its call sign to WRJT. The station received its license to cover on August 2, 1989. [5] On October 31, 1991, the station again changed its call sign to the current WKXD-FM. [6] July 9, 2012 at 9 am WKXD flipped from hot adult contemporary to country.
KYW broke from its all-news format on November 3, 2022, to simulcast Game 5 of the 2022 World Series, which involved the Philadelphia Phillies, with WPHT. The Phillies' flagship station, WIP-FM (94.1), could not air the game because of a conflict with the Philadelphia Eagles, who were playing a Thursday Night Football game at the same time. [46]
The station began licensed operation with 3,000 watts of effective radiated power at 107.1 MHz on June 6, 1968, as KDUZ-FM, a sister station to KDUZ (1260 AM). [1] Because KDUZ was a daytimer, able to broadcast only from sunrise to sunset, KDUZ-FM operated as a simulcast during the day then continued the mix of middle of the road and country music on its own the rest of the night and overnight.
News-talk radio stations 570 News in Kitchener/Waterloo, Ontario, News 95.7 in Halifax (also Rogers Broadcasting-owned stations) use an all-news wheel for their morning and afternoon shows, simulating their sister station, 680News in Toronto. In February 2001, Corus Entertainment launched an all-news sister station to Vancouver news-talk ...
The news programs were later branded as Channel 69 News in the late 1980s and the station's news division was expanded. In 1989, WFMZ added a 5 p.m. newscast and the 7 p.m. news show was moved up to 6 p.m. [10] In 1995, WFMZ expanded its news service geographically with the debut of its Berks Edition newscast at 5:30 p.m. In 1998, this program ...