Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Consisted of 27 stations (3 owned and operated and up to 24 "phantom stations" – time leased on affiliated radio stations. WEAF chain: Broadcasting Company of America: Northeast and Midwest United States 1923–1926 Regional network of AT&T-owned radio stations with New York City radio station WEAF as its hub.
List of AM radio stations in the United States by call sign (initial letters KG–KM) List of AM radio stations in the United States by call sign (initial letters KN–KS) List of AM radio stations in the United States by call sign (initial letters KT–KZ) List of AM radio stations in the United States by call sign (initial letters WA–WF)
Pages in category "Oldies radio stations in the United States" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 361 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
RTÉ Radio 1 (current affairs and speech based broadcasting); RTÉ 2fm (rock and pop music); RTÉ lyric fm (classical music plus jazz, world music and arts); RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta (the Irish language station targeted at the Gaeltacht, and the Irish language-speaking community of Ireland)
Children's Radio Network; The Christmas Channel; User:Chuterix/WHCP-FM; Classic Rock (Dial Global radio network) Classic Rock (Westwood One) Classical Public Radio Network; Classical South Florida; Cosmo Radio; Cumulus Media Networks
CBS Radio Mystery Theater; Earplay; The Firesign Theatre; The Fourth Tower of Inverness; Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes; The General Mills Radio Adventure Theater; Hollywood Theater of the Ear; Imagination Theater; NPR Playhouse; NPR's serialized adaptations of Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi; A Prairie Home ...
Horn made pop history when his Buggles were the first artist played on MTV, but his "Video Killed the Radio Star" prophecy came true as he produced artists who dominated the decade, like Frankie ...
Radio sets from before 1920 are rarities, and are probably military artifacts. Sets made prior to approximately 1924 were usually made on wooden breadboards, in small cupboard style cabinets, or sometimes on an open sheet metal chassis. Homemade sets remained a strong sector of radio production until the early 1930s.