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Tales of the Texas Rangers is a 20th century Western old-time radio and television police procedural drama which originally aired on NBC Radio from 1950 to 1952 and later on CBS Television from 1955 to 1958. [1]
Listed below are notable vintage radio programs associated with old-time radio, ... Tales of the Texas Rangers; Tarzan; Taystee Bread Winners; Teen Timers [13]
The Texas Rangers Radio Network has stations in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma. [2] The flagship station is 105.3 KRLD-FM in Dallas. When a Rangers game conflicts with other coverage on KRLD-FM, the baseball game moves to AM 1080 KRLD. Games have aired on Spanish radio stations KESS from 1991 to 2010, KZMP from 2011 to 2016, and KFLC ...
The Lone Ranger is the sole survivor of a group of six ambushed Texas Rangers. [12] ... [22] [23] As Dunning writes in On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio ...
KRLD-FM is the flagship station of the Dallas Cowboys Radio Network and the Texas Rangers Radio Network. Some early hours on weekends are paid brokered programming. In the sports radio format, KRLD-FM's chief rival is Sportsradio 1310/96.7 The Ticket. KRLD-FM broadcasts in HD Radio.
Thousands of Texas Rangers fans camped around Mark Holtz Lake for playoff tickets in 1996, 1998, and 1999. When the Rangers beat the Tampa Bay Rays in Game 5 of the ALDS on October 12, 2010, to capture their first postseason series victory, Eric Nadel exclaimed, "Hello Win Column!" on the Rangers radio broadcast.
[1] Although adults listened to earlier radio westerns, such as The Lone Ranger and Red Ryder, the main audience for those programs was children. [2] Another radio historian, Jim Cox, wrote in his book, Say Goodnight, Gracie: The Last Years of Network Radio, that Hawk Larabee "fell short in providing the stark realism of a grown-up narrative." [3]
Tales of the Texas Rangers (1950–1952) Tarzan (1932–1953) The Ted Lewis Show (1934–1948) The Ted Steele Orchestra (1939–1955) Tech Talk Radio (2000–present) Terry and the Pirates (1937–1948) Texaco Star Theater (1938–1948) That Brewster Boy (1941–1945) Theatre Guild on the Air (1945–1954) The Lives of Harry Lime (1951–1952)