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Australia's third commercial station, and the oldest commercial station still operating. 2UE: Sydney 26 January 1925 AM 1025 kHz B Class, commercial. [34] Was originally going to broadcast as 2EU, but the callsign was reversed prior to the licence being issued on 7 November 1924. JOAK: same as is Tokyo, Japan 22 March 1925 AM 594 kHz
WEW (770 AM) is a commercial radio station in St. Louis, Missouri. Owned by Birach Broadcasting Corporation, its studios are on Hampton Avenue in St. Louis. First licensed in March 1922, WEW is one of the oldest radio stations in the United States. The station's transmitter site is on Bunkam Road in Jerseyville, Illinois, near Interstate 64.
A weekly children's radio program. Off the air during World War II. By the time of its final broadcast it had become the world's longest-running regular weekly radio series. [16] La Hora Nacional: 87 25 July 1937 Weekly government-sponsored cultural and information broadcast required to be aired by all Mexican radio stations. CBS World News ...
WEBJ (1240 AM) is the oldest radio station in Brewton, Alabama, United States, going on air in 1947. The station serves the Brewton area with a news / talk format. The station broadcasts at 1000 watts and the transmitter is located near downtown Brewton.
It is the world's oldest listener-supported radio network. [16] Since the creation of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Pacifica has sometimes received CPB support. Pacifica runs other stations in Los Angeles, New York City, Washington, D.C. and Houston, as well as repeater stations and a large network of affiliates.
With all that's been happening in the news, does it feel like you've been reading the headlines more regularly? Take our quiz to see if that's true. Quiz: Test your news knowledge with our weekly quiz
President Trump called a world leader a “dictator without elections," and one state declared a "state of emergency" due to bird flu. See if you know the details in this week's News Quiz.
Radio stations attractiveness to advertisers began to change from a "mass medium" to one shaped by demographics, although to a lesser degree than television; radio formats began to be targeted toward specific groups of people according to age, gender, urban (or rural) setting and race, and freeform stations with broad playlists became uncommon ...