Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The New York Giants Radio Network is a broadcast radio network based in New York City, the official radio broadcaster of the National Football League's New York Giants. The network's radio broadcasts are currently flagshipped at WFAN, a station owned by Entercom Communications. Overflow radio casts air on WCBS, WFAN's corporate sibling. The ...
HD Radio University of New Orleans: New Orleans Louisiana: Website: WWOZ: 90.7 MHz Mainstream, Traditional Terrestrial New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Foundation New Orleans Louisiana: Website: WXTS-FM: 88.3 MHz Mainstream Terrestrial Toledo Ohio: WYAR: 88.3 MHz Vintage, Big Bands, Swing, Standards Terrestrial Heritage Radio Society, Inc. Yarmouth ...
WFAN-FM (101.9 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to New York, New York.Owned by Audacy, Inc., the station simulcasts a sports radio format known as "Sports Radio 66 AM and 101.9 FM", or "The FAN", along with co-owned WFAN (660 AM).
In 1999 WFAN decided to begin airing the Giants broadcast on sister station WNEW-FM, a practice it ended after one season. The Giants' radio casts moved back to WFAN and has been there ever since. The Giants' longtime radio home was WNEW-AM, where games aired from 1961 until 1993 when the station was bought by Bloomberg L.P. and changed its format.
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of New York, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, cities of license, licensees, and programming formats. List of radio stations in New York state
Here is the TV, radio, streaming schedule and other information for a Week 16 game between the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles.
WCBS-FM (101.1 FM) is a radio station owned and operated by Audacy, Inc. licensed to New York, New York, and broadcasting a classic hits format. The station's studios are in the combined Audacy facility in the Hudson Square neighborhood in Lower Manhattan, and its transmitter is located at the Empire State Building.
Meanwhile, a host of American jazz greats were serving as cultural ambassadors — Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Dizzy Gillespie among them — ostensibly to promote Yankee goodwill and ...