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KTBB (600 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Tyler, Texas, serving the Tyler-Longview market.It simulcasts a news/talk format with sister station 97.5 KTBB-FM.The stations are owned by Paul Gleiser, through licensee ATW Media, LLC.
KTBB-FM (97.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Troup, Texas, serving the Tyler-Longview market. It simulcasts a news/talk format with its sister station KTBB 600 AM . The stations are owned by Paul Gleiser, through licensee ATW Media, LLC.
KTBB may refer to: . KTBB (AM), a radio station (600 AM) licensed to serve Tyler, Texas, United States KTBB-FM, a radio station (97.5 FM) licensed to serve Troup, Texas; KRWR, a radio station (92.1 FM) licensed to serve Tyler, Texas, which held the call sign KTBB-FM from 2009 to 2015
KRWR (92.1 MHz, "The Team") is a commercial FM radio station in Tyler, Texas. It is owned by Paul Gleiser through licensee ATW Media, LLC, and it serves the Tyler-Longview radio market. It broadcasts a sports radio format as a network affiliate of Fox Sports Radio (heard daytime and weekends) and CBS Sports Radio (heard weeknights).
In the 1980s, Matt Williams bought the station and changed it from a music station to talk on AM. Williams later sold KEES to Citadel. Citadel in turn sold 1430 KEES, 600 KTBB, 1330 KDOK, 92.1 KDOK-FM, and 1490 KGKB to Paul Gleiser. Gleiser simulcasted KTBB on KEES, as the 600 signal did not cover Gregg county very well.
KBLZ (102.7 FM) is a terrestrial American radio station serving Tyler, Texas. Licensed to Winona, it broadcasts a Rhythmic Contemporary format in full simulcast with its sister station KAZE 106.9 Ore City, which serves the Longview/Marshall portion of the market. "The Blaze" is owned by Reynolds Radio, with studios located on Grande Boulevard ...
KOOI (106.5 FM) is an Alpha Media radio station broadcasting an adult hits format. Licensed to Jacksonville, Texas, United States, the station serves the Tyler-Longview area, [2] and is the East Texas broadcast radio home of the Dallas Cowboys. [3]
KLVI was a pop/top40 music station through the middle 70s but flipped to a country format in 1977. Later, it added AM stereo using the Motorola C-QUAM method. In the 1980s, KLVI added more talk programs and reduced the music, as music listening increasingly became the domain of FM radio. By the 1990s, the station made the full transition to ...