Channel Website; Login to Save as Favorite; This audio stream includes the archives shared for The American Revolution documentary film, coming in 2018, which have now been restored, and preserved for future listeners. It competed with iHeartMedia's longtime Classic Rock outlet WRFX. WBCN (1660 kHz AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Charlotte, North Carolina which has a sports talk format.
WEGO is a radio station licensed to serve Concord, North Carolina, which simulcasts WSAT in Salisbury, North Carolina. While still digital and largely automated, the online stream was live Monday through Friday during the day. WBCN is owned by Beasley Broadcast Group. Subscribe for unlimited digital access to the news that matters to your community.
WBCN was an over-the-air radio station in Boston, Massachusetts. For a long time, WBCN successfully balanced new and old music (featuring the slogan "Classic to Cutting Edge"). In the early 1990s, the station began airing the nationally syndicated Howard Stern Show, but aired it in the evenings on tape delay instead of during morning drive. WBCN, Boston's longtime rock station, was set to move to a digital-only platform, while 98.5 WBMX was moving to WBCN's old position at 104.1 FM. The WBMX call letters were parked in Charlotte, while WBCN aired for its final days. A lot more than Trump, data show.
Danny Schechter replaced Bo Burlingham and immediately billed himself as "the News Dissector". WLNK is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Charlotte, North Carolina. In the summer of 1999, WBCN moved its format away from strictly alternative music and more towards an active rock-leaning modern rock format.
Although WBCN was not the only radio station, or even the first station, to air material from the Get Back sessions — WKBW in Buffalo was the first, and the tapes also aired on WEBN in Cincinnati, WBAI in New York City, and KCOK in St. Louis — WBCN's broadcast of the tapes has been immortalized because it was preserved on a high-quality reel, which spawned several widely circulated Beatles bootlegs. WOSF is an urban adult contemporary station licensed to Gaffney, South Carolina; serving the Charlotte, North Carolina market.
It competed with iHeartMedia's longtime Classic Rock outlet WRFX. WKQC's studios are located on South Boulevard in Charlotte, while their transmitter site is in East Charlotte. That fall, Segal and Kopper hired J.J. Jackson as a disc jockey.
It also aired any Wake Forest or Davidson basketball games that conflicted with Charlotte Hornets games on WFNZ. WBT-FM is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Chester, South Carolina that primarily serves the western region of the Charlotte metropolitan area. For the first time, the owners of the station began to make a profit. "WBCN Free Form Rock" was formatted to play multiple music genres (including rock, jazz, the blues, and country).
WAME is a radio station broadcasting a classic country format. Della Chiesa is still active in classical music broadcasting on WCRB. WBCN aired the tape on September 22, 1969. In 1965, Nathaniel Johnson was appointed Music Director of WBCN by station program director Don Otto.
Morning drive time would be anchored by “This Morning America’s First News with Gordon Deal.” Afternoon rush hour will be covered by Hannity. WBCN operations manager D.J. Popular legend holds that WBCN was sent a promotional copy of The Beatles' unreleased Get Back album and played it on the air before the release of the album was cancelled. Écoutez WBCN Fox Sports Radio Charlotte en direct et gratuit.
The station signed on in December 2003 as WFNA to help improve the signal range of Charlotte's original all-sports station WFNZ, airing some of that station's programming. The format started at 98.5 FM on February 9, 1991, and moved to 104.1 FM, replacing WBCN on August 12, 2009, to allow for the launch of WBZ-FM at 98.5 the next day.
[7] During the following months, industry insiders, local media, and even WBCN's on air staff speculated that, in a matter of time, WBCN could see a format change, especially after the Boston Herald ran an article in the March 30th, 2009 issue about WBCN's future, and the station airing a Top 40 format for a few hours the following day (April Fool's Day).