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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.
New York City: New York Public Radio: Public radio: WNYC-FM: 93.9 FM: New York City: New York Public Radio: Public radio: WNYE: 91.5 FM: New York City: NYC Dept. of Information Technology and Telecommunications: Variety, educational WNYG: 1580 AM: Patchogue: Cantico Nuevo Ministry, Inc: Spanish Christian WNYH: 740 AM: Huntington: Win Radio ...
2000: WCBS leaves "Black Rock" for West 57th Street as part of a move to broadcasting using all-digital technology. Also around this time, the station begins referring to itself at Newsradio 880.
WCBS-FM, a New York City radio station (101.1 FM), with a classic hits format; WCBS-TV, a New York City TV station (PSIP 2/RF 36), flagship station of the CBS television network; WFMB (AM), a Springfield, Illinois radio station (1450 AM), that held the call sign WCBS from 1926 to 1946; WHSQ, a New York City radio station (880 AM), that held the ...
In a major shift for New York radio, the parent companies of WFAN and ESPN New York have agreed to a deal that will give ESPN NY a stronger signal. WCBS 880 ending all-news format as it's licensed ...
WCBS 880 AM, one of New York's leading news radio channels for nearly 60 years, will be replaced with ESPN New York on Aug. 26, as 1010 WINS becomes the main radio station for real-time news ...
When WCBS-FM came back to New York radio on July 12, 2007, Shannon helped launch the return. On November 18, as part of CBS-FM's weekly Radio Greats feature, he hosted a show as Don Bombard. Shannon stopped performing his mid-day shift at WCBS-FM in January 2012. It was reported that he left the station for health reasons.
WCBS 880 radio will send its final transmission at midnight -- after 57 years of delivering breaking crime news, political happenings and subway delays to New Yorkers, many of whom now rely on apps.