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WKVB (107.3 FM) is a non-commercial radio station licensed to serve Westborough, Massachusetts, United States, carrying a contemporary Christian format known as "K-Love". ". Owned by the Educational Media Foundation (EMF), WKVB does not broadcast any local programming but functions as the network affiliate for K-Love in Greater Boston and Worc
WAAF (910 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Scranton, Pennsylvania. Owned by Audacy, Inc., WAAF airs a news/talk format. It is powered at 900 watts by day and 440 watts at night, using a non-directional antenna at all times. The transmitter is at the corner of Penn Avenue and Spruce Street, on the Scranton Times Building. [2]
WAAF (AM), a radio station (910 AM) licensed to Scranton, Pennsylvania, United States; WKVB (FM), a radio station (107.3 FM) licensed to Westborough, Massachusetts, United States, which used the WAAF call letters from 1968 to 2020; West Austin Antenna Farm, an antenna farm located west in Austin, Texas, United States; Wheeler Army Airfield
XHSIAB-FM in San Felipe de la Peña, San Juan Bautista Tuxtepec, Oaxaca; XHUJAT-FM in Villahermosa, Tabasco; New Zealand. Various low-power stations up to 1 watt [3]
The format and WAAF call letters were formerly used by WKVB (107.3 FM) until its 2020 sale from Entercom to the Educational Media Foundation, with a simulcast on the two HD2 channels [26] (WAAF, in turn, carried WEEI-FM's programming on its HD2). Until 2017, WEEI-FM's HD2 channel simulcast then-sister station WRKO, with WAAF being broadcast on ...
WLVW (107.3 FM) – branded as K-Love – is a non-commercial Christian adult contemporary radio station licensed to serve Washington, D.C. Owned and operated by the Educational Media Foundation, WLVW does not broadcast any local programming, functioning as the Washington metropolitan area network affiliate for K-Love.
Liz Wilde (born Anne Whittemore) was an American radio personality best known for her shock jock radio program Liz Wilde. After much success at WSHE as the evening air personality, Liz moved her show to the Northeast, taking over the night shift of rock station WAAF in the Boston, Massachusetts radio market.
Originally assigned the WAFH call sign by the FCC in 1993, [6] the station signed on for the first time in 1994 as WKOK-FM, simulcasting the programming of WKOK. [7] On March 10, 1998, the station's call sign was changed to WEGH [ 6 ] and one month later, on April 18, the station re-branded as Eagle 107 with its "Rock ‘N Roll for Adults" slogan.