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The "News Center Weather Plus" feed on WLBZ-DT2 and the live video on their websites was replaced with the national Weather Plus service. News Center at 10 was eventually canceled by WCSH after a six-year run. An outdoors and human-interest program called Bill Green's Maine airs Saturday nights at 7 on WCSH and WLBZ.
KFNB subsequently became a Fox affiliate KLWY and made sister station K26ES (previously a translator of Cheyenne-based Fox affiliate KLWY) a full-time UPN affiliate. Riverton-Casper, Wyoming: KWRB-TV/KTNW 10 (now KFNE) 1957–1984 Fox (satellite of KLWY, Cheyenne) Shared affiliation with CBS affiliate KTWO-TV. Disaffiliated from NBC in 1984 and ...
Early FM programming was in a block format, with contemporary and country music interspersed with news features. [8] KTLO-AM-FM was sold in 1975 to four new investors for $400,000. [9] By the mid-1980s, KTLO had settled into a middle-of-the-road music format [1] known as "Stardust 98". [10] The 1990s saw ownership and technical changes for KTLO-FM.
The station was founded on March 9, 1982, and assigned the KZLE call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on April 13, 1983. [1] The station first picked up a short-lived MOR format, before turning it down for adult contemporary during 1983, known as "Class FM".
KZNG (1340 AM) is an oldies radio station in Hot Springs, Arkansas.It broadcasts with an ERP of 1 kW (1000 watts) from its broadcast tower near downtown Hot Springs. KZNG is owned and operated by US Stations, LLC, a local company that also owns KLXQ, KQUS and KLAZ in Hot Springs, Arkansas and KLBL in Malvern, Arkansas.
KXHT (Hot 107.1) is a mainstream urban radio station licensed to Marion, Arkansas and serves the Memphis, Tennessee, area.The Flinn Broadcasting outlet operates at 107.1 MHz with an ERP of 2.75 kW.
KURB (98.5 FM, B-98.5) is a commercial radio station in Little Rock, Arkansas.It is owned by Cumulus Media.The radio format is adult contemporary music, switching to Christmas music for much of November and December.
In 2004, the station was sold to First Broadcasting Investment Partners for $2.1 million. [7] It adopted an oldies format and was branded "Oldies 95.3". [8] [9] It was later branded "Flash 95-3". [10] In early 2008, the station adopted a country format as "95.3 The Rebel". [11] Its call sign was changed to WEBL on January 18, 2013. [12]