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ESPN Radio broadcast the 2010 World Series nationally, with Jon Miller (who worked the San Francisco Giants' local radio broadcasts during the regular season) calling his 13th consecutive World Series as the network's play-by-play announcer, and Joe Morgan providing commentary on his 11th World Series for ESPN Radio and his 14th overall ...
Phillips Carlin was a well-known NBC announcer, who had experience employing chimes in radio broadcasts dating back to at least 1924. At that time he was the announcer for the Silvertown Chimes program, which was broadcast over the "WEAF chain" network originating
In 1922, WJZ broadcast the entire series, with Rice doing play-by-play. [4] [5] For the 1923 World Series, Rice was joined on Westinghouse for the first time by Graham McNamee. [3] [7] During the 1923 World Series, Rice was the main broadcaster, but during the fourth inning of Game 3, he turned the microphone over to McNamee.
The station was nicknamed after the Warner Bros. Cartoon character Yosemite Sam, as it featured an audio recording of his voice. Yosemite Sam (/joʊˈsɛmɪti/ yoh-SEM-ih-tee) [1] is the nickname given by DXers to a rumored numbers station that was heard making intermittent broadcasts between December 19, 2004 and February 16, 2005.
Dodgers end another scoring threat . The Yankees are down to their final six outs in Game 3. Five Dodgers pitchers have combined to shut down the Yankees lineup through the first seven innings.
In Vin Scully's absence, came Jack Buck, who would call the World Series for CBS Radio from 1983 through 1989. In 1985, KMOX, the St. Louis Cardinals' flagship station at the time, simulcast with CBS Radio's World Series coverage involving the Cardinals. That was mainly because Jack Buck had a lengthy career calling Cardinals games for KMOX to ...
From 1969 to 1975, there was no official national radio network coverage of the League Championship Series. NBC only had the national radio rights to the All-Star Game and World Series during this period. Instead, national coverage was provided via broadcasts syndicated over ad hoc networks.
A weekly children's radio program. Off the air during World War II. By the time of its final broadcast it had become the world's longest-running regular weekly radio series. [16] La Hora Nacional: 87 25 July 1937 Weekly government-sponsored cultural and information broadcast required to be aired by all Mexican radio stations. CBS World News ...