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The Washington metropolitan area is currently the seventh-largest radio market in the United States. [1] While most stations originate within Washington, D.C. proper, this list includes also stations that originate from Northern Virginia and Annapolis, Maryland.
WMUC received its FM license for 88.1 MHz in 1979 after a two-year "FM or Bust" campaign, airing as a 10-watt FM station for the first time on September 10, 1979. It adopted the freeform format in 1982 so DJs could promote underground artists and music that is under-represented by commercial radio. WMUC(AM) 650 remained Top-40.
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Callsign Frequency City of license WMAB-FM: 89.9 FM: Mississippi State, Mississippi: WMAD: 96.3 FM: Cross Plains, Wisconsin: WMAE-FM: 89.5 FM: Booneville, Mississippi
In addition to WCSP-FM, C-SPAN Radio programming is also available online at c-span.org and via satellite radio on SiriusXM channel 455. WCSP-FM broadcasts in the HD (digital) format. [5] Prior to C-SPAN's acquisition of the 90.1 frequency in 1997, the station operated as WGTB-FM, the student radio station of Georgetown University, from 1960 to ...
WOWD-LP ("wow-dee") is a Variety formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Takoma Park, Maryland, serving a potential terrestrial audience of 250,000 [4] listeners in Takoma Park, College Park and Hyattsville in Maryland, along with parts of Northeast and Northwest Washington, D.C. [1] [5] WOWD-LP is owned and operated by Historic Takoma, Inc. [6]
Although the call sign WXTR moved over from 104.1 FM, Bonneville continued with country music on 820 AM. [9] As with 103.9 FM, starting in 2000 Bonneville used 820 AM to bolster the coverage of one of their Washington-market stations to the northwest.
WSIE is a public radio station in Edwardsville, Illinois.Owned by Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, it is the primary jazz station for the Greater St. Louis area. . Rebranding as "The Sound" in August 2016, WSIE broadcasts jazz, smooth jazz, blues, and R&B, [1] and is the anchor station for SIUE Sports' Cougar Ne