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WPAT (930 AM), is a radio station licensed to Paterson, New Jersey, with a brokered programming format. WPAT is owned by Multicultural Broadcasting, and its studios are located in New York City, in Manhattan's Financial District. The station's four 380 feet (120 m) transmitting towers are located in Clifton, New Jersey.
820 AM: New York City: New York Public Radio: Public radio: WNYC-FM: 93.9 FM: New York City: New York Public Radio: Public radio: WNYE: 91.5 FM: New York City: NYC Dept. of Information Technology and Telecommunications: Variety, educational WNYG: 1580 AM: Patchogue: Cantico Nuevo Ministry, Inc: Spanish Christian WNYH: 740 AM: Huntington: Win ...
It was the FM sister station of WPAT 930 AM, with studios in Newark, New Jersey. Its frequency of 93.1 MHz had previously been assigned to Edwin Howard Armstrong's pioneering FM station based in Alpine, New Jersey, KE2XCC. That station went off the air in 1954 with Major Armstrong's death. This was the second station to hold the WPAT-FM call sign.
The following radio stations broadcast on AM frequency 930 kHz: [1] As classified by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission and the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, 930 AM is a regional broadcast frequency.
The following is a list of radio stations owned by Audacy, Inc. As of June 2023, Audacy (then known as Entercom) operates 227 radio stations in 45 media markets across the United States. On February 2, 2017, Entercom announced that it had agreed to acquire CBS Radio.
New York Public Radio: NPR WNJP: 88.5 FM: ... 930 AM: Paterson: Multicultural Radio Broadcasting Licensee, LLC ... 1660 AM: Jersey City: Multicultural Radio ...
WIZR (930 AM) is a radio station that broadcasts a hot adult contemporary format. [2] Licensed to Johnstown, New York, United States, the station serves the Mohawk Valley area. The station is owned by the Cranesville Radio Network and features hit songs from the past five decades including songs from the 1970s until today.
On February 26, 1959, the station switched its call letters to WVOX-FM. WVOX-AM-FM joined a growing radio operation owned by the New York Herald-Tribune newspaper. By 1962, after John Hay Whitney bought the Herald-Tribune the year before, the paper's radio division included WVOX-AM-FM, WVIP, WGHQ in Kingston and WFYI (now WJDM) in Mineola. [9]