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WCHS signed on September 15, 1927, as WOBU, operating at 1120 kilohertz with 50 watts of power; it moved to 580 kilohertz the following year. The station was founded by Walter Fredericks, owner of the Charleston Radio Supply Company, who launched WOBU to sell more radios; he would sell the station in 1930.
They took the letters WVNS, which stood for “West Virginia’s 96“, and originally tagged themselves as “Warm 96“, playing a mix of oldies and light rock and pop. Shortly thereafter, they changed the tag to their eponymous “West Virginia’s 96 FM“, and adjusted the format to encompass a wide variety of oldies from the 50s, 60s, 70s ...
88.5 FM: Bluefield: West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority: Public radio WVBY: 91.7 FM: Beckley: West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority: Public radio WVCU-LP: 97.7 FM: Athens: Concord University: Variety WVDS: 89.5 FM: Petersburg: West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority: Public radio WVEP: 88.9 FM: Martinsburg
Callsign Frequency City of license WVAC-FM: 107.9 FM: Adrian, Michigan: WVAE: 1400 AM: Biddeford, Maine: WVAF: 99.9 FM: Charleston, West Virginia: WVAQ: 101.9 FM ...
WVTS is a news/talk formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Dunbar, West Virginia, serving Charleston and Nitro in West Virginia. [1] WVTS is owned and operated by Bristol Broadcasting Company. [5]
The network also includes 68 affiliates in the U.S. states of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia: fifty-three AM stations, thirty-nine of which supplement their signals with one or more low-power FM translators, and fifteen full-power FM stations.
Callsign Frequency City of license WMAB-FM: 89.9 FM: Mississippi State, Mississippi: WMAD: 96.3 FM: Cross Plains, Wisconsin: WMAE-FM: 89.5 FM: Booneville, Mississippi
Callsign Frequency City of license WRAC: 103.1 FM: Georgetown, Ohio: WRAD-FM: 101.7 FM: Radford, Virginia: WRAE: 88.7 FM: Raeford, North Carolina: WRAF: 90.9 FM ...