Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Multicultural Radio Broadcasting Licensee, LLC: Spanish WIBG-FM: 94.3 FM: Avalon: WIBG LLC: Classic hits WIFI: 1460 AM: Florence: Ritmo Broadcasting, LLC: Spanish CHR WIMG: 1300 AM: Ewing: Morris Broadcasting Company of New Jersey, Inc. Gospel WJLK: 1160 AM: Lakewood Township: Townsquare License, LLC: Hot adult contemporary (simulcast of WJLK ...
WWAC is co-owned with WIBG-FM, a classic hits station licensed to Avalon, New Jersey. By day, WWAC is powered at 1,900 watts, non-directional. [2] WWAC's signal reaches from Toms River to Cape May. Because 1020 AM is a clear channel frequency reserved for 50,000 watt Class A station KDKA in Pittsburgh, WWAC must go off the air at night to avoid ...
New Jersey Public Radio (NJPR) is an NPR member network serving portions of northern New Jersey on four licensed stations: 88.1 WNJT-FM in Trenton, 88.5 WNJP in Sussex, 89.3 WNJY in Netcong, and 90.3 WNJO in Toms River, which were the four northernmost radio stations of the New Jersey Network (NJN) until 2011.
WBNJ (91.9 FM, "WBNJ 91.9") is an American radio station broadcasting to the Monmouth–Ocean County, New Jersey, market with 4,500 watts from a 226-foot tower located along New Jersey Route 72 in Barnegat, New Jersey. The station airs an adult standards music format. [2] [3]
WOBM (1310 kHz) is an adult contemporary AM radio station serving southern Monmouth and northern Ocean County, New Jersey. Licensed to Asbury Park, its studios are located in Toms River and its transmitter is in Tinton Falls. The station is owned by Townsquare Media.
WNJN-FM (89.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Atlantic City, New Jersey. The station is owned by WHYY, Inc., and simulcasts the public radio news and talk programming of WHYY-FM in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
WFMU (91.1 MHz) is a non-commercial, listener-supported, independent community radio station licensed to East Orange, New Jersey, with studios in Jersey City. It is owned by Auricle Communications, broadcasting a free-form radio format. The station holds periodic on-air fundraisers and seeks donation on its website. WFMU is a Class A station.
The five stations previously belonged to New Jersey Network's statewide radio service. [2] WHYY assumed control of the stations through a management agreement on July 1, 2011, pending Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval for the acquisition; at that point, the stations began to carry the WHYY-FM schedule.