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WINS (1010 kHz) is a commercial, all-news AM radio station licensed to New York, New York owned by Audacy, Inc. The station brands itself "1010 WINS", with its call sign phonetically pronounced as "wins".
Pete Tauriello is a veteran traffic anchor on 1010 WINS, WKXW and several other radio stations in the New York City area including a few years on the Z-100 "Morning Zoo." [1] He has also served as a traffic reporter on WWOR-TV and more recently on WNBC-TV's "Today In New York."
NY 27 acts as the primary east–west highway on southern Long Island east of the interchange with the Heckscher State Parkway in Islip Terrace. The entire route in Suffolk, Nassau, and Queens counties were designated by the New York State Senate as the POW/MIA Memorial Highway. The highway gives access to every town on the South Shore. NY 27 ...
1010 WINS remains the oldest all-news AM radio station in the United States, providing local, traffic and weather news for millions of New Yorkers since April 1965. Audacy introduced a simulcast ...
The station launched as WMCA-FM at 2:30 pm on December 25, 1948, transmitting from atop the Chanin Building.It operated daily between 3 and 9 pm, duplicating programming that originally aired on its AM counterpart, WMCA; both stations were co-owned by former New York state senator Nathan Straus Jr. [4] The FM station was not a profitable success, and in December 1949 officials announced the ...
The station is consulted by Pete Tauriello, noted New York Traffic Anchor for 1010 WINS Radio and former program director of the Shadow Traffic Network of New York, in addition to WERA Plainfield, N.J. and WBRW Somerville, N.J. Tauriello said, "Today's college student doesn't even own a radio. You won't find one in a dorm room.
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. (PIX11) — An off-duty New York City employee was arrested Monday afternoon, according to the NYPD. Michael Ibrahim, 41, was taken into custody around 3:30 p.m. Ibrahim is ...
Its traffic reports and news coverage included more of Long Island and Westchester County than WINS did, and it occasionally allowed room for longer interviews and analysis pieces than WINS. The station was less tightly formatted than WINS, and formatted at half-hour cycles instead of 20-minute cycles. [28]