翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ WTOT
・ WTOT (AM)
・ WTOT-FM
・ WTOU
・ WTOV-TV
・ WTOW
・ WTOX
・ WTOY
・ WTP
・ WTP Advisors
・ WTPA
・ WTPA (FM)
・ WTPC-TV
・ WTPG
・ WTPH-LP
WTPL
・ WTPM
・ WTPM (FM)
・ WTPM-LD
・ WTPN
・ WTPR
・ WTPS
・ WTPS (AM)
・ WTPT
・ WTPX-TV
・ WTQ
・ WTQR
・ WTQS
・ WTQT-LP
・ WTQX


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WTPL : ウィキペディア英語版
WTPL

WTPL (107.7 FM, "The Pulse") is a radio station broadcasting a news/talk/sports format. Licensed to Hillsborough, New Hampshire, USA, it serves the Concord-Manchester area. The station is currently owned by Great Eastern Radio.
==History==
The original construction permit for the station was granted on August 4, 1987, under the call sign of WRCI; a license to cover was granted on September 7, 1990. However, the station's original owners, Empire Radio Partners, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1992, and the station was sold to Radioworks in 1993. By 1994, WRCI was serving as a simulcast of its then-sister station WJYY (105.5), an adult contemporary station. The station had changed simulcast partners to WNHI (93.3; now WNHW), a classic rock station, by 1996.〔
Radioworks sold its stations to Vox Media in 1999, and on December 27 the station was converted to the current news/talk format by way of a simulcast with another Vox station, WKXL, as part of a format shuffle that resulted in WKXL's original FM station, on 102.3, becoming the country music station WOTX-FM (now WWHK). The WKXL-FM call sign moved to 107.7 the following February.
Vox sold WKXL to Embro Communications in 2002. The sale did not include WKXL-FM or its programming; as a result, WKXL launched a separate news/talk format, with its prior programming remaining on 107.7 under the new call letters of WTPL. Embro took over WTPL as well under a local marketing agreement the next year, and reintroduced some shared programming, including a talk show hosted by Arnie Arnesen. Vox then sold WTPL to its current owner, Great Eastern Radio (whose principal, Jeff Shapiro, had co-owned Vox with Bruce Danzinger〔), in 2004, and soon afterward the station again became independent of WKXL, relocating to studios in Bow, New Hampshire, and a transmitter atop Pats Peak, both originally constructed for WNNH (99.1).〔 (Clark Smidt, who founded WNNH, has had involvement with WTPL.)〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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