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On October 4, 2012, WEEI and WEEI-FM split the simulcast; the existing local programming and sports broadcasts remain on WEEI-FM, while AM 850 aired a redirection loop for one day before becoming a full ESPN Radio affiliate on October 5, 2012. [19] WEEI promotional booth at a supermarket in Boston. J.T. The Brick's Fox Sports Radio program was ...
Co-flagship of the football & basketball networks with WEEI/WEEI-FM. WWEI: 105.5 Easthampton, Massachusetts: Sports: Football, basketball WPKZ: 1280 Fitchburg, Massachusetts: News/Sports Football, Men's Basketball W287BT: 105.3 Translator for WPKZ. WEEI-FM: 93.7 Lawrence, Massachusetts: Sports: Football, basketball Simulcast of football ...
The 105.5 MHz frequency used by WWEI was originally allocated to Pittsfield, Massachusetts, where it signed on in October 1967 [2] as WQRB-FM. [3] It was co-owned with WBEC (1420 AM), though it offered its own programming; [3] this was a middle-of-the-road format by 1972. [4] The station became WBEC-FM in 1979, upon adopting an album-oriented ...
WEEI (850 kHz) is a commercial sports gambling AM radio station licensed to Boston, Massachusetts, serving Greater Boston and much of New England.Owned by Audacy, Inc., WEEI is the Boston affiliate for the Audacy-owned BetQL Network and Infinity Sports Network, serving as a gambling-focused brand extension of its main sports radio station in the market, WEEI-FM.
WEII (96.3 FM, "SportsRadio 96.3") is a radio station in Dennis, Massachusetts. The station airs a sports radio format from Boston-based WEEI-FM . It is owned by iHeartMedia .
An FM sister station, WEEI-FM (103.3 FM, now WBGB), went on the air in 1948. [10] Until 1960, WEEI, through CBS Radio, was the last Boston radio station to devote a large amount of its program schedule to "traditional" network radio programming of daytime soap operas, comedy shows, variety shows, and similar fare.
The Big Show is a former sports talk radio program hosted by Glenn Ordway on Boston's WEEI-FM 93.7 FM. Started in August 1995, the show was hosted by Ordway and former Boston Globe columnist Michael Holley. The show ended on March 19, 2013.
The following is a list of current Major League Baseball broadcasters, as of the 2025 season, for each individual team.Some franchises have a regular color commentator while others (such as the Milwaukee Brewers) use two play-by-play announcers, with the primary often doing more innings than the secondary.