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This free concert starts at 6:30 p.m. The Western Reserve Big Band is celebrating the 60th anniversary of the British Invasion. Those attending should bring a lawn chair or blanket with family and ...
The South Shore has plenty of music, including Valerie Barretto, Suzanne McNeil, Sister Funk, The Side Cars Band, Four Sticks and Get the Led Out.
A WIVB-TV truck driving through the streets of the 2012 St. Patrick's Day parade in Buffalo, New York. For most of the time since 2000, WIVB-TV has been the most-watched news station in Western New York (according to Nielsen) after rival WKBW-TV's long winning streak ended. The station regularly scores ratings wins for every newscast it airs ...
In addition, two free concerts included in fair admission are scheduled. The All-Ohio State Fair Band & Youth Choir is to perform at 1 p.m. on Sunday and Hotel California, an Eagles tribute, is ...
The station signed on the air as WNEQ-TV on May 13, 1987, and was the second public television outlet serving the Buffalo market.It was operated under an educational license and was sister station to WNED-TV (channel 17), which had a commercial license but operated as an educational station (WNED-TV operated on channel 17 because of the donation of equipment to it by WBUF-TV, a defunct ...
Its directional border blaster signal aimed at Toronto is pointed away from, and inaudible to most of, Western New York. 930 AM WBEN: News Radio 930 news: Audacy, Inc. 970 AM WDCZ: Christian: Crawford Broadcasting: Simulcast of WDCX-FM. 1080 AM WUFO: POWER 96.5 Classic hip-hop: Sheila Brown and Darius Pridgen Licensed to Amherst. Translator at ...
In late 1946, WGR was bought by a consortium of Western New York families known as the WGR Corporation. This company signed on WGR-TV (channel 2) in 1953 and WGR-FM (now WGRF ) in 1959. WGR Corporation bought several other television and radio stations in the 1950s, and eventually became known as Transcontinent Broadcasting.
The station changed formats and call letters in the autumn of 1986, switching to classic hits with the motto "Classic Hits 104.1, The All New WHTT". The station was one of the first to take the "classic hits" name in the United States, and did so due to the lack of a classic rock station in Buffalo after WGRQ (96.9 FM) switched to adult contemporary music.