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WTAG (580 AM) is a radio station in Worcester, Massachusetts. It is owned by iHeartMedia and airs a news/talk format. WTAG's studios are in Paxton and it broadcasts from a transmitter in Holden, Massachusetts. The transmitter operates at 5,000 watts day and night. WTAG programming is simulcast on FM translator W235AV at 94.9 MHz, licensed to ...
830 AM: Worcester: Carter Broadcasting Corporation: Talk WCTK: ... Town of Nantucket Police Department: Emergency Info ... Community radio WORC: 1310 AM: Worcester ...
WORC (1310 kHz) is an AM radio station in Worcester, Massachusetts, United States, owned by Gois Broadcasting.The station broadcasts at a transmitter power output of 5,000 watts during the day and 1,000 watts at night, and serves central and eastern Massachusetts.
Chances are, if you weren’t watching it on television, you probably heard it on WTAG AM 580 radio--as folks in Worcester have since 1924. 100 years over the waves: WTAG marks century as ...
WCRN (830 AM) is a radio station in Worcester, Massachusetts, owned by Carter Broadcasting.The station broadcasts with a transmitter power output of 50,000 watts and can be heard from Maine to Providence, Rhode Island, and from Boston to Springfield, Massachusetts (during the day).
WCRN/830 is Worcester's only 50,000-watt radio station. Broadcasting a talk format, they also broadcast UMass athletics, the New England Surge professional indoor football team and the Boston Red Sox, and was the radio home of Worcester Tornadoes baseball games. WORC/1310 is a Spanish-format radio station owned by the Gois family. Up until the ...
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. The studios are on Commercial Street in Downtown Worcester in the ...
[7] [11] Though this gave Shepard his long-desired Worcester station, [11] the move was soon followed by the sale of the Yankee Network to General Tire & Rubber. [12] As early as 1948, the station was broadcasting with 5,000 watts. [13] The Yankee Network leased WAAB, along with WMTW in Portland, Maine, to Radio Enterprises, Inc. in 1949. [14]