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Big Radio operates three local FM radio stations (Big Radio 1, Big Radio 3, Big Radio 4), one near-national FM radio station in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Big Radio 2), three online internet radio services (Big Folk Radio, Big Balade Radio, Big Rock Radio) as well as two web portals www.bigportal.ba and www.bigradiobl.com.
BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards (started 2000) Big John @ Breakfast (started 2000) Sounds of the 70s (2000–2008, resumed 2009) Dead Ringers (2000–2007, resumed 2014) A Kist o Wurds (started 2002) Fighting Talk (started 2003) Jeremy Vine (started 2003) The Chris Moyles Show (2004–2012, resumed 2015) Elaine Paige on Sunday (started 2004) The Bottom ...
Senator Dan Sullivan on the air on KVRF in 2018.. KVRF (89.5 FM), branded as Big Cabbage Radio, is a community radio station licensed to Sutton, Alaska, United States.Based in nearby Palmer, Alaska, the station broadcasts to the Matanuska-Susitna Valley with transmitters serving Sutton, Palmer, and Chickaloon.
In an interview with The N&O in 2002, Lamm described those glory days of radio. “You can’t imagine how big radio was prior to TV,” he said. “It was incredibly exciting just after World War II.
WBGR-FM (93.7 MHz; "The Big FM") is a radio station broadcasting a mix of classic hits and oldies formats. Licensed to Monroe, Wisconsin, United States, the station is owned by Big Radio. [3] Their studios are east of Monroe, at W4765 Radio Lane. The transmitter site is southwest of Monroe, on Franklin Road.
The commercially oriented folk-music revival as it existed in coffee houses, concert halls, radio, and TV was predominantly an English-language phenomenon, though many of the major pop-folk groups, such as the Kingston Trio, Peter, Paul and Mary, The Chad Mitchell Trio, The Limeliters, The Brothers Four, The Highwaymen, and others, featured ...
WFUV has been a professional noncommercial radio station since 1990. [11] To be more competitive in the New York market at this time, it introduced a more folk and alternative music sound under the name "City Folk", as well as news/talk radio elements such as weather and traffic reports. [12]
The first Southern radio station to broadcast rural white music is WSB in Atlanta. [59] Rural folk performers begin to perform for local radio stations in Atlanta and Fort Worth. [19] [60] Kid Ory and his Sunshine Orchestra record "Ory's Creole Trombone" and "Society Blues".