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Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee [2] [3] Format [4]; KADU: 90.1 FM: Hibbing: Heartland Christian Broadcasters: Contemporary Inspirational KAKK: 1570 AM: Walker
Former Cleveland infielder Carlos Baerga, Guardians Spanish radio analyst since 2024. Former Cleveland player Jack Graney was the team's lead announcer from 1932 to 1953. Former Cleveland pitcher Herb Score , who was part of the then Indians broadcast team in both radio and TV from 1964 to 1997.
The Cleveland Guardians Radio Network is an American radio network composed of 29 radio stations for the Cleveland Guardians, a professional baseball team in Major League Baseball (MLB). Cleveland sister stations WTAM ( 1100 AM ) and WMMS ( 100.7 FM ) serve as the network's two flagships ; [ 1 ] WTAM also relays its signal over a low-power FM ...
The Alan Cox Show is rated No. 1 in several key demographics, and readers of Cleveland Scene named Alan Cox the best Cleveland radio personality four straight years (2010–13). [152] In addition to the live broadcast, the show is available on demand through iHeartRadio; and can be downloaded as a podcast through iTunes.
KSJN broadcasts using HD Radio technology, and uses its HD2 subchannel to carry American Public Media's Classical 24 network. The 99.5 frequency was established as commercial radio station WLOL-FM in 1957; the station achieved its most success as a top-rated Top 40 station during the 1980s under Emmis Communications ownership.
The Current is also broadcast on stations in Rochester, Duluth-Superior, Pasadena-Los Angeles, translators around Minnesota, and online. The Current, which has been broadcasting its AAA format since 2004, debuted after MPR purchased WCAL-FM, the radio station of St. Olaf College in Northfield, in 2004. [ 2 ]
WCCO is the Primary Entry Point station for the Emergency Alert System in Minnesota. [10] For a series of live public-service emergency broadcasts in 1965 – the St. Patrick's Day blizzard, the record April floods on the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers, and the May 6 onslaught of 24 tornado touchdowns in the Twin Cities area – the station ...
Minnesota Public Radio began on January 22, 1967, when KSJR-FM first signed on from the campus of Saint John's University in Collegeville, just outside St. Cloud.Colman Barry, then president of Saint John's, saw promise in the then relatively new technology of FM radio, and believed radio was an appropriate extension of Saint John's cultural and artistic functions to the broader community. [4]