Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Packers radio network was previously with WTMJ, which has broadcast the games since November 24, 1929, and was the former flagship station of Journal Communications until the E. W. Scripps Company and Journal completed their broadcast merger and publishing spin-off on April 1, 2015 (Good Karma took over WTMJ's operations on November 1, 2018 upon Scripps' second withdrawal from radio). [1]
Listen live: Website: 107TheBull.com: WFON (107.1 FM) ... The station airs all games of the Green Bay Packers as a member of the Packers Radio Network. References
Station advertisement (1936) [3] WCLO was originally licensed on August 24, 1925 to C. E. Whitmore, [4] broadcasting from Camp Lake, west of Kenosha.Its owner at that time was a real estate development company with a project called Camp Lake Oaks, from which came the call letters assigned by the government to the small 50-watt station.
After his playing career ended, he was inducted in the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame. He began a television and radio broadcasting career in 1988 at WFRV-TV and he was named the Wisconsin Sportscaster of the Year four times. McCarren has been working on the Packers Radio Network as the color commentator for the Packers' radio broadcasts since ...
WRNW is the flagship radio station for the Green Bay Packers Radio Network. In addition, it is the Milwaukee affiliate for the Wisconsin Badgers Radio Network through Learfield Sports. It also carries Westwood One Sports , Milwaukee Admirals AHL Hockey and weekend motor races.
Listen Live: Website: kxrb.com: KXRB (1140 kHz) is an AM radio station in Sioux Falls ... Green Bay Packers as the only South Dakota affiliate of the Packers Radio ...
Packers games can be heard on the Packers Radio Network, made up of 54 stations in Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Illinois, and North and South Dakota. 97.3 The Game, WRNW-Milwaukee, is the ...
The 1969 NFL Championship Game was the final broadcasting assignment for Paul Christman, who died less than two months later on March 2.; The 1967 NFL Championship Game was televised by CBS, with play by play being done by Ray Scott for the first half and Jack Buck for the second half, while Frank Gifford handled the color commentary for the entire game. [4]