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KWRM (1370 kHz, iCiti Radio Los Angeles) is a commercial AM radio station that broadcasts a Chinese language News radio format. It is owned by James Y. Su, through licensee EDI Media, Inc. The station is licensed to Corona, California. The transmitter is located south of the Chino Airport.
Los Angeles: Los Angeles Academy of Arts and Enterprise: Variety KZLA: 98.3 FM: Riverdale: Huron Broadcasting, LLC: Rhythmic Oldies KZLQ-LP: 98.9 FM: La Quinta: Cadena Radial Remanente: Spanish Religious KZNB: 1490 AM: Petaluma: Luna Foods, Inc. Regional Mexican: KZNQ-LP: 101.5 FM: Santa Clarita: Santa Clarita Public Service Broadcasters ...
Radio stations of the University of Southern California (6 P) Pages in category "Radio stations in Los Angeles" The following 84 pages are in this category, out of 84 total.
KALI (900 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to West Covina, California, and serving the eastern suburbs of Los Angeles. The station is owned by Multicultural Broadcasting and broadcasts Mandarin Chinese and other ethnic programming. By day, KALI broadcasts at 5,000 watts.
KMKY (1310 AM) is a radio station licensed to Oakland, California that broadcasts with 5,000 watts. It calls itself "Radio Punjab" and airs programming in Hindi and Punjabi aimed at the San Francisco Bay Area's South Asian community. It is owned by Charanjit Batth, through licensee Radio Punjab AM 1310 Inc.
L.A.'s most popular public radio station, KPCC, is changing its name to LAist 89.3.
KMRB (1430 AM) is a broadcast radio station in the United States. Licensed to San Gabriel, California, KMRB serves the Greater Los Angeles area with a Cantonese language format. It is owned and operated by Multicultural Broadcasting. The station originally signed on in 1942 as KWKW.
KCHUNG is a freeform radio station in the Chinatown neighborhood of Los Angeles as KChung Radio 1630 AM. KCHUNG broadcasts over 200 shows a month on 1630 AM and online through the station's website. [1] The station operates according to what are generally known as the Part 15 rules, which cover very-low-power RF transmissions without a license. [2]