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Black-oriented news KHNW: 88.3 FM: Manson: Washington State University: Public radio: ... First Baptist Church of Riverview: Christian radio ... Washington State ...
In the 1970s, WAVA-AM-FM decided to compete with WTOP (now WFED) as one of Washington's two all-news radio stations. Even though WAVA (AM) was still a daytime-only station, the all-news format was heard on WAVA-FM around the clock; as such, that made WAVA-FM the only all-news station on the FM dial in those days, when many home and car radios could only receive AM signals.
WARQ added an HD3 subchannel, airing Christian Radio programming, from the Worship & Word Network. It feeds an FM translator at 105.1 MHz. It feeds an FM translator at 105.1 MHz. An HD4 subchannel was added when co-owned WPCO 1230 AM went silent .
Callsign Frequency City of license WNAA: 90.1 FM: Greensboro, North Carolina: WNAE: 104.3 FM: Clarendon, Pennsylvania: WNAN: 91.1 FM: Nantucket, Massachusetts: WNAP-FM
WJTB-FM (95.3 FM) – branded GNN Radio – is a commercial Christian radio station licensed to serve South Congaree, South Carolina.Owned by Augusta Radio Fellowship Institute, Inc., the station services the Columbia metropolitan area and surrounding Midlands region as an affiliate of GNNradio.
The Bible Broadcasting Network (BBN) is a listener-supported global Conservative Christian radio network staffed and headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina. It was founded in 1971 by Lowell Davey, who was the network's president until his death in 2017.
The station first signed on the air on August 15, 1967, as WWQS. [3] It was co-owned with WVCF (1480 AM) in Windermere. [4] In 1973, American Homes Stations sold WWQS to Rounsaville Radio, owner of WBJW (1440 AM) in Winter Park, which changed the call letters to WBJW-FM, with the FM as a contemporary hits station, branded BJ105, and the AM airing an easy listening format. 105.1 was sold to ...
The Washington metropolitan area is currently the seventh-largest radio market in the United States. [1] While most stations originate within Washington, D.C. proper, this list includes also stations that originate from Northern Virginia and Annapolis, Maryland.