Jump to content

List of mass media in Cleveland: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Removing WABQ from the list, as it's not a full market station...it specifically serves Lake County.
Line 42: Line 42:
|-
|-
| [[WHK]] || 1420 || conservative talk || Newstalk 1420 WHK
| [[WHK]] || 1420 || conservative talk || Newstalk 1420 WHK
|-
| [[WABQ]] || 1460 || [[progressive talk]] || Talk 1460
|-
|-
| [[WERE]] || 1490 || talk || Newstalk 1490 WERE
| [[WERE]] || 1490 || talk || Newstalk 1490 WERE

Revision as of 22:26, 18 April 2012

The following is a list of media in Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

Print

Daily

Weekly

Monthly

Defunct

Radio

AM

Call letters Frequency Format Branding
WKNR 850 sports ESPN 850 WKNR
WCCD 1000 gospel/religious Radio 1000
WJTB 1040 gospel/religious
WTAM 1100 news/talk Newsradio WTAM 1100
WHKW 1220 religious AM 1220 The Word
WWMK 1260 Radio Disney AM 1260 Radio Disney
WJMO 1300 gospel/urban talk Praise 1300
WHK 1420 conservative talk Newstalk 1420 WHK
WERE 1490 talk Newstalk 1490 WERE
WWGK 1540 sports ESPN 1540 KNR2

FM

Call letters Frequency Format Branding
WBWC 88.3 college/modern rock
(Baldwin-Wallace College)
WJCU 88.7 college/eclectic
(John Carroll University)
WCSB 89.3 college/eclectic
(Cleveland State University)
WCPN 90.3 NPR/news/jazz
WRUW-FM 91.3 college/eclectic
(Case Western Reserve University)
WKRK-FM 92.3 sports 92.3 The Fan
WZAK 93.1 urban AC
WFHM-FM 95.5 Christian contemporary 95.5 The Fish
WAKS 96.5 top 40/pop 96-5 KISS FM
WNCX 98.5 classic rock
WGAR-FM 99.5 country
WMMS 100.7 hot talk/active rock The Buzzard
WDOK 102.1 adult contemporary The New 102
WCRF-FM 103.3 Christian contemporary/religious
WQAL 104.1 hot AC/adult top 40 Q 104
WCLV 104.9 classical
WMJI 105.7 classic hits Majic 105.7
WHLK 106.5 adult hits 106-5 The Lake
WNWV 107.3 smooth AC 107-3 The Wave
WENZ 107.9 hip-hop/rap Z 107-9

Television

Nielsen Media Research ranks the 17-county Cleveland-Akron television market as the 18th largest in the United States.[2] On October 20, 2007, Cleveland became the first city in the United States to have all its commercial television newscasts produced in high-definition. WJW was the first in December 2004;[3] WKYC joined on May 22, 2006;[4] WEWS started on January 7, 2007;[5] and WOIO joined on October 20, 2007.[6]

Broadcast

Call Letters Channel
(Virtual/Digital)
Network
WKYC 3.1/17.1
3.2/17.2
NBC
Weather Radar
WEWS-TV 5.1/15.1
5.2/15.2
ABC
Live Well Network
WJW 8.1
8.2
FOX
Antenna TV
WDLI-TV 17.1/49.1
17.2/49.2
17.3/49.3
17.4/49.4
17.5/49.5
TBN
The Church Channel
JCTV
Enlace USA
Smile of a Child
WOIO 19.1/10.1
19.2/10.2
CBS
Me-TV
WVPX-TV 23.1
23.2
23.3
Ion
qubo
Ion Life
WVIZ 25.1/26.1
25.2/26.2
25.3/26.3
25.4/26.4
25.9/26.9
PBS
The Ohio Channel
PBS World
Create
Cleveland Sight Center (audio only)
WUAB 43.1/28.1
43.2/28.2
My Network TV
Bounce TV
WBNX-TV 55.1/30.1
55.2/30.2
55.3/30.3
The CW
religious/independent
This TV
WQHS-DT 61.1/34.1 Univision

Cable

Internet

References

  1. ^ Betsy Sheldon (2001). The Jewish travel guide. Hunter Publishing, Inc. Retrieved August 9, 2011.
  2. ^ 2008-2009 DMA Ranks. Accessed October 31, 2008.
  3. ^ Fox 8 Station History. Accessed February 23, 2008.
  4. ^ WKYC: HDTV FAQ. Accessed February 23, 2008.
  5. ^ WEWS: Cleveland Leads Nation in HDTV. Accessed February 23, 2008.
  6. ^ "19 Action News" Joins The 21st Century. Accessed February 23, 2008.
  7. ^ "About Us". Cleveland.com. Retrieved February 28, 2012.