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WBNY is the descendant of the college's AM carrier-current station known as WSCB, which could be received only through the campus's electrical system. The WBNY call letters were previously assigned to 1400 AM in Buffalo in the 1940s and 1950s. WBNY also has been used as the call sign for a "long-running" shortwave pirate radio station. [3]
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; WAAL: 99.1 FM: Binghamton: Townsquare License, LLC: Classic rock: WABC: 770 AM: New York City: Red Apple Media, Inc.
The station signed on the air on November 11, 1966, as WBNY-FM, a sister station to WJJL (1440 AM) in Niagara Falls. (The WBNY call letters had previously been used on WYSL, and the station is unrelated to today's WBNY, a college radio station at 91.3 FM). At the time, WJJL and WBNY were owned by the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corp.
National Public Radio: Buffalo Toronto Public Media 89.9 FM WBWA: Air1: Contemporary Christian: Educational Media Foundation: 90.7 FM WLGU: CSN International: Christian CSN International Licensed to Lancaster. 91.3 FM WBNY: 91.3 WBNY college radio: Buffalo State College: 92.1 FM WZDV: Dove FM Christian: Calvary Chapel: Simulcast of WYVL/WTWT ...
Following the allocation of the 90.5FM frequency to Capital, and another licence to Noongar Radio on 100.9FM, the station ceased transmission. Following further test transmissions on 101.7 FM, the station secured a full-time community licence for the Fremantle RA1 area, also served by Radio Fremantle. The station launched at 12:00 am on 2 ...
WBUF began broadcasting in 1947, among the earliest FM stations in Buffalo. 1947: WBNY-FM 1959: WBUF The Home of the Blended Sound (Beautiful music) WBUF was "The Home of the Blended Sound" as part of The Empire State FM Network which also included WVOR in Rochester, WDDS in Syracuse, and WFLY in Albany/Troy.
Founded in September 1955, WAPS originally broadcast on 89.1 until moving to 91.3 in August 1994 to increase signal coverage. The station moved the transmitter site in December 2002 from the original antenna on top of the studio building at 70 North Broadway Street to the WVPX television tower to increase signal coverage to points west and south of Akron.
Eventually, Talbot became sales manager and then owner of WJJL, which was incorporated as the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corp. He also owned FM radio station 96.1 WBNY (now WTSS) in Buffalo. Talbot began one of the first radio "two-way" telephone talk shows in the United States in the early 1950s, which was called Party Line. There was an ...