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KFYR is a Fox News Radio Network affiliate. Weekend syndicated shows include Armstrong & Getty and Sunday Nights with Bill Cunningham. There is live play-by-play sports from the Minnesota Vikings and University of Mary football games, and high school sporting events. Some hours on weekends include oldies shows.
KFYR-TV: 5: 31: 2014 [J] NBC; Fox (DT2) ... Sports radio: Former stations. Television. City of license / Market Station Channel RF Years owned Current status
Pop contemporary hit radio KJIT-LP: 106.7 FM: Bismarck: He Will Provide Radio: Religious (Radio 74 Internationale) KJKJ: 107.5 FM: Grand Forks: iHM Licenses, LLC: Active rock KJKL: 89.1 FM: Jamestown: Educational Media Foundation: Contemporary Christian KJKR: 88.1 FM: Jamestown: Hi-Line Radio Fellowship, Inc. Christian (Your Network of Praise ...
KQCD airs a time-shifted feed of KFYR in Mountain Time for most of the day, apart from station identifications and commercials. The network was founded by the Meyer family of Bismarck, which signed on KFYR radio in 1925. KFYR-TV, North Dakota's second television station, signed on in 1953.
KYYY, a radio station (92.9 FM) licensed to Bismarck, North Dakota, United States, which formerly used the call sign KFYR-FM Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about radio and/or television stations with the same/similar call signs or branding.
The Bison Radio Network is a series of 22 radio stations that broadcast North Dakota State Bison Athletics to the United States and Canada: North Dakota, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba over the air, and around the world via online streaming. [1] The Bison Radio Network is produced by the flagships KQWB-AM ...
KFYR-TV was established in 1953 by the Meyer family as the first television station in Bismarck and third in the state. The Williston and Minot stations were set up in 1957 and 1958, with Dickinson being added in 1980. As with KFYR radio, "Meyer Television" became the market leader. The Meyer family owned KFYR-TV until it opted to exit ...
Bill Owen giving a public talk on Old-Time Radio. He continues to do radio and TV commercials, the best-known being a series for the National Motor Museum Mint featuring replicas of popular cars and trucks from the past. He also appears before senior clubs with a nostalgia program about old-time radio and other memories of the 1930s and 40s.