Frequencies are listed first, followed by call sign, location, transmitter power, network affiliation (if known), and station owner. If a station has a web page, it can be accessed by clicking on the call letters.
Operations frequencies are listed after the broadcast frequencies; keep in mind, though, that it is, for some completely unknown and probably peculiar reason, illegal to listen to remote broadcast and studio-to-transmitter link frequencies, even though you can legally listen to the same thing as it comes out on the broadcast frequency.
Another note: "Citicasters" is also known by their corporate name "ClearChannel", or their previous name "Jacor". Jacor/ClearChannel/Citicasters owns nearly a thousand radio and TV stations around the country (with an especially heavy concentration in Ohio), including *every* station in Marion except the Ohio State University station. Draw your own conclusions....
Also, a look through the FCC broadcast database listings is very illuminating; several small colleges in Ohio are, for some reason, putting stations on line in Columbus and several other cities, and via them, simulcasting the signal from the college station. Exactly why we in Columbus and other locations should want to listen to small colleges elsewhere is unknown, and exactly how this serves the public interest in Columbus is totally beyond me.....
Click the area (Central or Southeast) you are looking for:
Created: 03/26/2000
Last Updated: 08/31/2003
© 2000, T.R. Swisher, Jr, WA8PYR