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West Virginia MetroNews offers a mix of news and talk. It held the rights to live play-by-play coverage of West Virginia University Mountaineers sports games, which it marketed under the DBA name "Mountaineer Sports Network", but lost these rights following the end of the 2012/13 basketball season.
WCHS signed on September 15, 1927, as WOBU, operating at 1120 kilohertz with 50 watts of power; it moved to 580 kilohertz the following year. The station was founded by Walter Fredericks, owner of the Charleston Radio Supply Company, who launched WOBU to sell more radios; he would sell the station in 1930.
WVRC Media is a media corporation comprising radio stations and two radio networks based in the state of West Virginia. The company was known as the West Virginia Radio Corporation prior to a December 2021 rebranding. [2] The company is controlled by Greer Industries and its owners, the Raese family.
Officials told West Virginia Metro News that it took first responders nearly two hours to extinguish the subsequent blaze. Out of an abundance of caution, all Riverside area feeder schools have ...
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate, is in a fight to keep his iconic Greenbrier hotel. ... In a statement to West Virginia MetroNews ...
And West Virginia MetroNews reported last week and again Tuesday that Manchin is getting strong encouragement to jump into the governor’s race against Morrisey, whom he beat in his 2018 Senate ...
WSWW (1490 kHz, "Charleston's ESPN Radio") is an AM radio station airing a sports radio format in Charleston, West Virginia, United States. The station is an affiliate of ESPN Radio and is owned by WVRC Media. The station has a power of 1,000 watts. It is also heard on FM translator W294CL (106.7 FM) in and around Charleston.
WRVZ (107.3 MHz, "107.3 The Beat") is an FM radio station licensed to Miami, West Virginia. Owned by WVRC Media , it broadcasts a rhythmic contemporary format serving the Charleston area. History