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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. |
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