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Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; WAAL: 99.1 FM: Binghamton: Townsquare License, LLC: Classic rock: WABC: 770 AM: New York City: Red Apple Media, Inc.
In large urban centers, AM radio signals can be severely disrupted by metal structures and tall buildings. As a result, AM radio tends to do best in areas where FM frequencies are in short supply, or in thinly populated or mountainous areas where FM coverage is poor. Great care must be taken to avoid mutual interference between stations ...
91.7 FM: Tonopah: Nevada Public Radio: Public News/Talk KTQQ: 88.1 FM: Elko: Radio 74 Internationale: Contemporary Christian KUEZ: 104.1 FM: Fallon: Big Horn Media, Inc. Soft adult contemporary KUNR: 88.7 FM: Reno: Board of Regents of the Nevada System of Higher Education: Public radio KUNV: 91.5 FM: Las Vegas: University of Nevada-Las Vegas ...
After sign-off time, WLNA-FM continued on-the-air until about midnight, allowing its programming to be heard in the evening when the AM station was silent. On October 24, 1971, WLNA-FM changed its call letters to WHUD. In 1972 the simulcast ended as FM signal split off and launched a beautiful music format, syndicated from Bonneville International.
WHSQ (880 AM, "ESPN New York 880") is a radio station in New York City.Owned by Audacy, Inc. and operated by Good Karma Brands (GKB) under a local marketing agreement (LMA), it broadcasts a sports radio format as the co-flagship of the ESPN Radio network.
WNBF is one of the Southern Tier's oldest radio stations. Although the station has traditionally traced its founding to 1928, [7] the year it moved to Binghamton, it was first licensed on February 7, 1927, to the Howitt-Wood Radio Company (Lyle E. Howitt and H. L. Wood) at 117 West Main Street in Endicott, New York, with 50 watts on 1460 kHz, [8] operating from the Elvin Theater. [9]