WVRA (107.3 FM') is a radio station broadcasting a Religious format. Licensed to serve Enfield, North Carolina, USA, the station is currently licensed to Liberty University, Inc.
990WBOB is a digital media and radio outlet based in Providence, Rhode Island. Founded in Providence, Rhode Island in 2007, 990WBOB.com is an all-encompassing digital media powerhouse in the New England market. An independent media outlet and two-time Providence Phoenix Best Blog Award winner, 990WBOB.com provides up-to-the-minute news, sports, politics and weather through its award-winning digital print and radio platform with more than 80,000 listeners in Rhode Island and availability in more than 200,000 homes nationwide.
WBOB may refer to:
WBOB (600 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a talk radio format. Licensed to Jacksonville, Florida, USA, the station is currently owned by Chesapeake-Portsmouth Broadcasting Corporation.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, the call sign was WPDQ with a Top 40 format. In the mid 1970s, WPDQ traded frequencies with WMBR/1460 with the call letters WMBR (Miami Beach Radio) moving to the AM 600 frequency. The former WMBR 1460 became urban formatted WPDQ. The format on the new WMBR/600 was MOR (Middle Of the Road) known as Bright MOR Personality. The moniker was changed to Sunny 60 in 1978 with another call letter change to WSNY although the format remained Bright MOR Personality until 1980 when the call letters were changed to WAIV. At that time WAIV began simulcasting Top 40 programming from its sister FM station WAIV-FM 96.9 known as The Big Wave.
Pop country became the new format in 1981 with a call letter change to WOKV, known as OK 60 The Unrock. Music continued on WOKV with various adjustments from pop country to adult contemporary to oldies before becoming News-Talk AM 600 WOKV in the late 80s, home of Rush Limbaugh. When Cox Radio acquired the former WAPE facilities, which had become WPDQ when the former WPDQ/1460 became CNN News WZNZ, in the mid '90s, the WOKV call letters and news-talk programming moved to the more powerful 50 kW 690 frequency while the call letters WPDQ once again returned to AM 600 with an adult standards format. Cox radio later changed the call letters to WBWL with the station becoming marketed as The Ball with a format change to all sports.