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WRNB (100.3 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Media, Pennsylvania in the Philadelphia–Delaware Valley radio market. It is owned by Radio One and airs an urban adult contemporary radio format .
KILT-FM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000 watts, the highest permitted for non-grandfathered FM stations in the U.S. [2] The transmitter is off Farm to Market Road 2234 near Fort Bend Parkway in Southwest Houston. [3] KILT-FM broadcasts in the HD Radio hybrid format. The HD-2 subchannel simulcasts the sports radio format of KILT
1250 AM Houston: MO: ESPN 1250 Houston WHB: 810 AM Kansas City: MO: Sports Radio 810 WXOS: 101.1 FM ... 103.7-2 FM Richmond: VA: ESPN Radio 106.1 WTON: 1240 AM ...
(Before WRNB went on the air in 2004, the call sign was used for a Radio One-owned sister station in Dayton, Ohio, now called WROU-FM.) The new permanent urban AC format as WRNB went on the air on February 4, 2005. Radio One paid $35 million for the "move-in" FM station, which was now able to attract Philadelphia listeners and advertisers. [6]
October 21, 2024 at 10:34 AM. Four people are dead, including a child, after a helicopter crashed into a radio tower in Houston Sunday night, according to authorities. ... The crash happened just ...
In 1947, an FM station was added, 101.1 KTRH-FM. [4] It was the third FM station in Houston (after the short-lived KOPY and KPRC-FM) and mostly simulcast KTRH's programming when few people had FM radios. KTRH-AM-FM aired the CBS Radio Network line-up of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the ...
KRNB was first launched at 6 a.m. on September 16, 1996, with an Urban Adult Contemporary format playing R&B music, hence the call sign. (Coincidentally, it is the western reflection of an R&B station in Philadelphia called WRNB.) [3] [4] At the time, its only other competitor for the rest of the decade was KRBV, which went off the air as an R&B station in 1998 due to a transmitter problem ...
KPFT (90.1 FM) is a listener-sponsored community radio station in Houston, Texas, which began broadcasting March 1, 1970, as the fourth station in the Pacifica radio family. The station airs a variety of music, news, talk, and call-in programs, most ranging from center-left to far-left.