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"United States TV Stations: Georgia", Yearbook of Radio and Television, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1964, OCLC 7469377 – via Internet Archive; Patrick Novotny (2007). "Impact of Television on Georgia, 1948-1952". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 91.
WSB-FM 98.5 Atlanta, main and allotment, Cox Radio; WSBB-FM 95.5 Atlanta, main and allotment, Cox Radio; WVEE FM 103.3 Atlanta, main and backup, Entercom; WZGC FM 92.9 Atlanta, backup only, Entercom; New Street, southwest (unpainted) tower: WABE-TV DTV 21 (30.1) Atlanta, digital only, Atlanta Board of Education; WABE FM 90.1 Atlanta, Atlanta ...
The Atlanta metropolitan area is currently the ninth-largest radio market in the United States as ranked by Nielsen Media Research. [6] The following list includes full-power stations licensed to Atlanta proper, in addition to area suburbs. Currently, radio stations that primarily serve the Atlanta metropolitan area include: [7] [8]
WBIN (640 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Atlanta, Georgia. It is owned by iHeartMedia, through its subsidiary iHM Licenses, LLC. It serves the Atlanta metropolitan area as its affiliate for the Black Information Network. The station's studios and offices located at the Peachtree Palisades Building in the Brookwood Hills district.
WBEN has traditionally traced its history to September 8, 1930, the date when it made its first broadcast using the WBEN call sign. [2] However, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) records list the station's first license date as September 22, 1922, [3] tracing WBEN's origin to an earlier license, with the sequentially assigned call letters of WMAK, that was issued to Norton Laboratories ...
The Buffalo Bills Radio Network is a broadcast radio network based in Buffalo, New York.Its primary programming is broadcasts of Buffalo Bills home and away games to a network of 26 stations in upstate New York, the Northwestern and Northern Tiers of Pennsylvania, and the state of Wyoming, having previously also had affiliates in Southern Ontario.
Chas. A. Alicoate, ed. (1957), "Amplitude Modulation Stations - AM: Georgia", Radio Annual and Television Yearbook, New York: Radio Daily Corp., OCLC 10512206 – via Internet Archive "AM Stations in the U.S.: Georgia", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive
Georgia Tech was the home of an early AM radio station, WBBF (later WGST, now WGKA AM 920), which began operation in January 1924. [5] Much of this station's initial equipment had been previously used by the Atlanta Constitution's WGM , and was donated through the efforts of the newspaper's editor, Clark Howell .