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WXLO (104.5 FM; "104.5 XLO") is a hot adult contemporary radio station owned by Cumulus Media, licensed to Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and serving the Worcester and Boston markets. [4] The station broadcasts on the FM band on a frequency of 104.5 MHz.
Worcester Love is an online video guide about Worcester County-Central Massachusetts with an emphasis on locally owned businesses, cultural diversity, and environmental sustainability. Real Worcester is a front page for news, blogs, and events listings for Worcester and the surrounding area.
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee [1] Format [citation needed]; WACE: 730 AM: Chicopee: Holy Family Communications: Catholic WACF-LP: 98.1 FM ...
KBEF in Gibsland, Louisiana; KBMC-LP in Macks Creek, Missouri; KBTW in Lenwood, California; KBUN-FM in Blackduck, Minnesota; KBYC in Markham, Texas; KCBW in Grandin, Missouri; KCCR-FM in Blunt, South Dakota
WORC-FM (98.9 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Webster, Massachusetts, and serving the Worcester metropolitan area.It is owned by Cumulus Media and airs a country radio format, mostly featuring songs from the 1990s and early 2000s, with occasional newer songs.
WICN (90.5 FM) is a NPR member radio station in Worcester, Massachusetts.It broadcasts commercial-free, 24 hours a day to an audience of over 40,000. The programming is mostly jazz, with daily evening shows dedicated to soul, bluegrass, Americana, folk and blues, world music, and Sunday night public affairs programming.
In January 2003, the station ditched Bob & Tom and took on an active rock format while keeping the name "The Fox" but identifying as "Worcester's Rock Station." That would be short lived, as in November 2004 the station changed format back to classic hits, retaining the WWFX call letters but changing its name to "100 FM The Pike" and ditching ...
The station went on the air on July 25, 1974, as WVLC-FM, broadcasting on 104.7 MHz. Initially, the station was just a full-time simulcast of WVLC (1170 AM, now WFPB). WVLC-FM became WLOM in 1977. In 1980, the FM band was still new territory for Top-40 radio.