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WOR (710 AM) is a 50,000-watt class A clear-channel AM radio station owned by iHeartMedia and licensed to New York, New York.The station airs a mix of local and syndicated talk radio shows, primarily from co-owned Premiere Networks, including The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, The Sean Hannity Show, and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory.
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of New York, ... WOR: 710 AM: New York City: iHM Licenses, LLC: News/talk: WOSR: 91.7 FM ...
The last new three-letter call was assigned to station WIS (now WVOC) in Columbia, South Carolina on January 23, 1930. Since then, three-letter calls have only been assigned to stations, including FM (beginning in 1943) [1] and TV (beginning in 1946), [2] which are historically related to an AM station that was originally issued that call sign.
The following radio stations broadcast on AM frequency 710 kHz: [1] 710 AM is a United States clear channel frequency. [2] ... WOR: New York, New York: 7710: A: 50: 50
The WOR Radio Network was a slate of nationally syndicated radio programming produced and distributed by flagship radio station WOR in New York City.The programming was primarily general interest commercial talk; only one non-talk program had ever been carried on the network, WAER's "Big Bands, Ballads and Blues".
Both its AM and FM stations in Boston were sold to Atlantic Ventures. [62] In New York, WOR-AM was acquired by Buckley Broadcasting and WRKS-FM (the former WOR-FM) went to Summit Communications. The company's two radio stations in the Washington, D.C., market were sold to Classical Acquisition Partnership. [63]
December 17, 2024 at 1:00 AM. ... #14 Portable Radio In A Straw Hat, Made By An American Inventor. ... In 1938 the first wireless newspaper was sent from the New York radio station WOR, which ...
The station is owned by Howard Toole, with Rome Radio Partners, LLC, holding the broadcast license. By day, WROM is powered at 1,000 watts. Because it shares the same frequency as Class A clear channel station WOR in New York City, WROM is a daytimer. To avoid interference, it must go off the air at night, when radio waves travel farther.