Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 23 Feb 2005 03:24:41 GMT, "Blue Cat" wrote:
There are some that I came upon: WGY 810 kHz, Schenectady, NY "G" for General Electric, "Y" last letter in Schenectady. KGO 810 kHz, San Francisco, CA "G" for GE, "O" last letter in San Francisco. GE owned both stations many years ago. WROW 590 kHz, Albany, NY "Row!" (like a dog growling) "Watchdog of the Capital District". WPTR 1540 kHz, Albany, NY (back in the 1960s), Patroon Broadcasting Corp. WROV 1240 kHz, Roanoke, VA (back before 1990s) "RO" for Roanoke, "V" for Virginia. WSLS 610 kHz, Roanoke, VA (Before 1980), Shenandoah Life (insurance) Station WQBA 1140 kHz, Miami, FL (Spanish speaking) Q, pronounced "coo", BA as in "bah". Said together, it is "Cuba" as said in Spanish. WEAF (later WNBC, WRCA and WFAN) was next in sequence after the call letters that the FCC originally offered and the owners rejected - WDAM. WEVD (now WEPN) stood for Eugene V. Debs, the labor union leader who helped found the Socialist Party and was jailed for criticizing World War I. WCFL (I'm not sure what that is now) was Chicago Federation of Labor WLS (then owned by Sears) was the World's Largest Store KYW doesn't stand for anything but it has an interesting migratory history, having originated in Chicago, then Philadelphia, Cleveland and back to Philadelphia. WJZ is another call associated with AT&T and Westinghouse which has done some migration. Originally the NBC Blue Network (later ABC) call in New York, it is now the call for the Westinghouse (later CBS) TV station in Baltimore. I don't think you can actually buy a call from one station to use on another station but Ted Turner bribed the MIT student radio station WTBS (Technology Broadcasting System) to change its call to WMBR so that the call WTBS would become available to his TV station. Also, are there any sets of calls in which the AM/FM and TV stations are hundreds of miles apart other than for KCBS? KCBS is in San Francisco. KCBS-TV (originally KNXT, from KNX for the Los Angeles Evening Express) and KCBS-TV are in Los Angeles. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joel Rubin wrote:
On 23 Feb 2005 03:24:41 GMT, "Blue Cat" wrote: There are some that I came upon: WGY 810 kHz, Schenectady, NY "G" for General Electric, "Y" last letter in Schenectady. KGO 810 kHz, San Francisco, CA "G" for GE, "O" last letter in San Francisco. GE owned both stations many years ago. WROW 590 kHz, Albany, NY "Row!" (like a dog growling) "Watchdog of the Capital District". WPTR 1540 kHz, Albany, NY (back in the 1960s), Patroon Broadcasting Corp. WROV 1240 kHz, Roanoke, VA (back before 1990s) "RO" for Roanoke, "V" for Virginia. WSLS 610 kHz, Roanoke, VA (Before 1980), Shenandoah Life (insurance) Station WQBA 1140 kHz, Miami, FL (Spanish speaking) Q, pronounced "coo", BA as in "bah". Said together, it is "Cuba" as said in Spanish. WEAF (later WNBC, WRCA and WFAN) was next in sequence after the call letters that the FCC originally offered and the owners rejected - WDAM. WEVD (now WEPN) stood for Eugene V. Debs, the labor union leader who helped found the Socialist Party and was jailed for criticizing World War I. WCFL (I'm not sure what that is now) was Chicago Federation of Labor The WCFL refered to above is now WMVP and is owned by ABC and is ESPN Radio WLS (then owned by Sears) was the World's Largest Store Also in Chicago, there is WMBI, Moody Bible Institute WGN which stands for Worlds Greatest Newspaper (Chicago Tribune) WIND does not stand for Windy City, but stands for Indiana where it was first licensed. Downstate in Champaign-Urbana, IL there is WILL which is licensed to the University of Illinois and stands for Illinois. In South Bend Indiana WSBT stands for South Bend Tribune and WNDU (now only TV) stands for Notre Dame University who owns it through a commercial subsidiary. KYW doesn't stand for anything but it has an interesting migratory history, having originated in Chicago, then Philadelphia, Cleveland and back to Philadelphia. WJZ is another call associated with AT&T and Westinghouse which has done some migration. Originally the NBC Blue Network (later ABC) call in New York, it is now the call for the Westinghouse (later CBS) TV station in Baltimore. I don't think you can actually buy a call from one station to use on another station but Ted Turner bribed the MIT student radio station WTBS (Technology Broadcasting System) to change its call to WMBR so that the call WTBS would become available to his TV station. Also, are there any sets of calls in which the AM/FM and TV stations are hundreds of miles apart other than for KCBS? There is an AM & FM in Michigan that are about 175 miles apart. WKLZ-AM, Kalamazoo and WKLZ-FM, Petosky. They are not commonly owned. KCBS is in San Francisco. KCBS-TV (originally KNXT, from KNX for the Los Angeles Evening Express) and KCBS-TV are in Los Angeles. Early call letters and their meanings can be found at the top of the page at Jeff Miller's Broadcasting History site at http://members.aol.com/jeff560/jeff.html Charlie -- To respond by Email remove never- from address |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joel Rubin wrote:
Also, are there any sets of calls in which the AM/FM and TV stations are hundreds of miles apart other than for KCBS? KCBS is in San Francisco. KCBS-TV (originally KNXT, from KNX for the Los Angeles Evening Express) and KCBS-TV are in Los Angeles. Yep: for one example, WWVA-AM in Wheeling, West Virginia: WWVA-FM in an Atlanta suburb. There are other examples. But to the best of my knowledge, KCBS was the *first* station to "split" their calls like that. -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joel Rubin wrote:
KYW doesn't stand for anything but it has an interesting migratory history, having originated in Chicago, then Philadelphia, Cleveland and back to Philadelphia. I once read that it stood for "Know Your World". Bob Radil A ?subject=KYW" E-Mail /A BobRadil(at)comcast.net BobRadil(at)aol.com BobRadil(at)yahoo.com BobRadil(at)netscape.net |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
WFOR was (is?) a small 250W AM station in Hattiesburg, MS (FORrest
county). WFOR-TV is in Miami, no connection I think. Joel Rubin wrote: On 23 Feb 2005 03:24:41 GMT, "Blue Cat" wrote: There are some that I came upon: WGY 810 kHz, Schenectady, NY "G" for General Electric, "Y" last letter in Schenectady. KGO 810 kHz, San Francisco, CA "G" for GE, "O" last letter in San Francisco. GE owned both stations many years ago. WROW 590 kHz, Albany, NY "Row!" (like a dog growling) "Watchdog of the Capital District". WPTR 1540 kHz, Albany, NY (back in the 1960s), Patroon Broadcasting Corp. WROV 1240 kHz, Roanoke, VA (back before 1990s) "RO" for Roanoke, "V" for Virginia. WSLS 610 kHz, Roanoke, VA (Before 1980), Shenandoah Life (insurance) Station WQBA 1140 kHz, Miami, FL (Spanish speaking) Q, pronounced "coo", BA as in "bah". Said together, it is "Cuba" as said in Spanish. WEAF (later WNBC, WRCA and WFAN) was next in sequence after the call letters that the FCC originally offered and the owners rejected - WDAM. WEVD (now WEPN) stood for Eugene V. Debs, the labor union leader who helped found the Socialist Party and was jailed for criticizing World War I. WCFL (I'm not sure what that is now) was Chicago Federation of Labor WLS (then owned by Sears) was the World's Largest Store KYW doesn't stand for anything but it has an interesting migratory history, having originated in Chicago, then Philadelphia, Cleveland and back to Philadelphia. WJZ is another call associated with AT&T and Westinghouse which has done some migration. Originally the NBC Blue Network (later ABC) call in New York, it is now the call for the Westinghouse (later CBS) TV station in Baltimore. I don't think you can actually buy a call from one station to use on another station but Ted Turner bribed the MIT student radio station WTBS (Technology Broadcasting System) to change its call to WMBR so that the call WTBS would become available to his TV station. Also, are there any sets of calls in which the AM/FM and TV stations are hundreds of miles apart other than for KCBS? KCBS is in San Francisco. KCBS-TV (originally KNXT, from KNX for the Los Angeles Evening Express) and KCBS-TV are in Los Angeles. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 23 Feb 2005 03:24:41 GMT, "Blue Cat" wrote:
WROV 1240 kHz, Roanoke, VA (back before 1990s) "RO" for Roanoke, "V" for Virginia. WSLS 610 kHz, Roanoke, VA (Before 1980), Shenandoah Life (insurance) Station For future historical reference with these two: The WROV calls landed on 96.3 Martinsville, VA, which inherited 1240's history as "The Rock of Virginia" for the Roanoke/Lynchburg market. 1240 is now WGMN ("The Game", sports), simulcast with Lynchburg's WVGM/1320. The WSLS calls are still on TV channel 10, the R/L market's NBC affiliate. 610 eventually became WSLC, for decades the area's dominant country station. The format and WSLC calls migrated to FM 94.9, where it exists today as "Star Country". For a time, WSLC/610 simulcasted the new FM country signal, and is now WVBE(AM)... the AM and Roanoke simulcast of Lynchburg-targetted urban FM station "Vibe 100" (WVBE[FM] 100.1). That station was once WLYK ("Lynchburg's K", I presume), and IT used to simulcast Roanoke top 40 WXLK/92.3 before breaking out on its own with the new format in 2001. |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
www.kidon.com The Mississippi link,shows the call letters of the radio
and tv stations around here. cuhulin |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Blue Cat" wrote in message ... There are some that I came upon: Interesting list... here's another: WCCO, Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN (830 KHz). W-C-CO stands for Washburn Crosby Co., a milling company that eventually became the food giant, General Mills. Jackie |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
snip
WTIC is Travelers Insurance Company, although back in the 70's I also heard it explained as "Watch Travelers Ignore Claims". |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
A few from my previous stomping grounds, Northeastern Oklahoma/Northwest
Arkansas. KRMG (AM 740) - Originally owned by Kerr McGee oil company KVOO (now KFAQ 1170AM) - stood for Voice Of Oklahoma - I believe these calls are now parked on the sister FM at 98.5. KMOD - acronym for Middle Of the Dial (97.5FM) KELI (used to be AM1430) - if memory serves, Kelly was the name of the original owners' daughter. KXOJ (100.9 FM) - Christian easy listening station - ironically, the calls stood for eXcited Over Jesus. KCFO (AM 970) - Christian talk station, the calls stand for Christ For Oklahoma - originally these calls were parked at 98.5FM as "Love 98". KXUA (88.3 FM) - University of Arkansas KUAF (91.3 FM) - University of Arkansas at Fayetteville KAMO (94.3 FM) - The story I was told was that when the station signed on in the late 60's, it was the only FM in the region that could be heard in all four of the following states - Kansas, Arkansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. KBVA (106.5 FM) - Licensed to Bella Vista, Arkansas. KURM (AM 790) - I've actually met the original owner, and his first name was/is Kermit. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Amateur Radio Newslineâ„¢ Report 1402 Â June 25, 2004 | Broadcasting | |||
Amateur Radio Newslineâ„¢ Report 1400 Â June 11, 2004 | Broadcasting | |||
183 English-language HF Broadcasts audible in NE US (30-MAR-04) | Shortwave | |||
Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1367 – October 24 2003 | Shortwave | |||
Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1367 – October 24 2003 | Dx |