Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. WCBS 880 radio will send its final transmission at midnight — after 57 years of delivering breaking crime news, political ...
WCBS, News Radio 880 AM, has a deep history in New York City and the suburbs. News broke Monday that the station as it's been known will be no longer. Here's a look at how it got started and a ...
In a major shift for New York radio, the parent companies of WFAN and ESPN New York have agreed to a deal that will give ESPN New York a stronger signal while ending the nearly six-decade run of ...
WCBS 880 AM, one of New York's leading news radio channels for nearly 60 years, will be replaced with ESPN New York on Aug. 26, as 1010 WINS becomes the main radio station for real-time news coverage ...
Craig Allen has worked at weather forecasting since he was a 17-year-old senior at Farmingdale High, and has been paid to do it for the past 43 years — all of those for WCBS/880 AM newsradio, which ...
For the first time since August 1967, radio listeners awoke Monday with news station WCBS 880 no longer on the dial. The 24-hour news outlet signed off after midnight and will now operate as an ESPN ...
This story was reported by Neil Best, Verne Gay and Nicholas Spangler. It was written by Spangler. WCBS/880 AM, the all-news radio station New Yorkers have known for decades by the trademark "Traffic ...
Almost nobody wins by WCBS-AM getting vaporized from the New York radio airwaves. For 57 years, 880 AM has been newsradio for the tristate area. Now it’s ESPN Radio, and while some of the WCBS-AM ...
Audacy Inc. has revealed that, after 57 years as a News-focused offering serving the New York Tri-State area, WCBS-AM 880 in New York will sign off the air on August 26. At that time, the Craig ...
On Sunday, a familiar voice is going silent. It's the voice, not of one person, but of the dozens that made up the collective on-air personality known as WCBS-AM Newsradio 880. For many of us who grew ...
WCBS 880 radio will send its final transmission at midnight — after 57 years of delivering breaking crime news, political happenings and subway delays to New Yorkers, many of whom now rely on apps.