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The Bob & Tom Show is a syndicated US radio program established by Bob Kevoian and Tom Griswold at radio station WFBQ in Indianapolis, Indiana, March 7, 1983, and syndicated nationally since January 6, 1995. Originally syndicated by Premiere Networks, the show moved to Cumulus Media Networks (now Westwood One) at the beginning of 2014.
13 KCOP-TV Los Angeles ( MyNetworkTV )*. 14 KPOM-CD Ontario ( Catchy Comedy )*. 18 KSCI Long Beach ( ShopHQ) 20 KVME-TV Bishop ( Jewelry TV) 22 KWHY-TV Los Angeles ( Spanish Independent) 24 KVCR-DT San Bernardino ( PBS) 25 KNET-CD Los Angeles ( Multicultural independent) 26 KVHD-LD Los Angeles (Comfy TV)
The 2009 lineup of Angels broadcasters had been [13] Physioc (TV and radio play-by-play), Rex Hudler (TV and radio analyst), Gubicza (TV analyst), José Mota (lead analyst on the Spanish radio broadcasts), Markas (radio and TV play-by-play), and Smith (radio play-by-play). During the 2008 Major League Baseball season, [14] Markas worked 75 ...
The station's advertised channel number follows the call letters. In most cases, this is their over-the-air broadcast frequency. Excluded from this list are satellite stations and affiliates of secondary television networks. Independent stations with secondary affiliations to major networks, however, are included.
John Drury and Newsnine (simulcast of former 10 p.m. newscast; 1978–September 1980) Nightbeat (simulcast of former late night newscast; 1978–83) Ray Rayner and His Friends (1978–81) The Bozo Show (1980–94) WGN News at Nine (formerly The Nine O'Clock News; simulcast of 9 p.m. newscast; September 1980–January 30, 2014) WGN Midday News ...
Most games also are simulcast on WFED, "Federal News Radio," at 1500 and 820 AM, which is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting after its purchase of the station from Bonneville International and was the flagship station of the Nationals from the first season in Washington through the 2010 season.
KMET was a Los Angeles FM radio station owned by Metromedia (hence the "MET" in its call sign) that broadcast at 94.7 MHz beginning on May 2, 1966. [1] It signed off permanently on February 14, 1987 after a 21-year run on air. [2] The station, nicknamed "The Mighty Met" (among other nicknames), was a pioneering station of the "underground ...
Keith Erickson: 1988–1990 (Z Channel) Kevin Loughery: 1988–1990 (KTLA) Mike Fratello: 1990–1992 (KTLA, KCOP-TV) Earl Strom: 1990–1991 (Prime Ticket) Jerry Tarkanian: 1991–1992 (SportsChannel Los Angeles) Bill Walton: 1992–2002 (SportsChannel Los Angeles, KCOP-TV, KCAL-TV, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)