NBC Red Network

NBC Red Network
NBC Red Network/
NBC Radio Network
Type Radio Network
Country United States
Availability Most of the United States
Owner RCA: January 1927 - October 1986
GE: October 1986 - August 1987
Westwood One: August 1987 - May 2004
Launch date January 1, 1927 (as NBC Red Network)
January 9, 1942 (as NBC Radio Network)
Dissolved May of 2004 (last hourly newscast)
October 27, 2011 (last on-air mention)
Former names A prototypical network operated by AT&T and WEAF radio

The NBC Red Network was one of the two original radio networks of the National Broadcasting Company. After NBC was required to divest itself of its Blue Network (which would become the American Broadcasting Company), the Red Network continued as the NBC Radio Network.

It, along with the Blue Network, were the first two commercial radio networks in the United States (the CBS Radio Network having been established two years later). The NBC Radio Network itself no longer exists under its original configuration, having been gradually dissolved into eventual corporate parent Westwood One.

Contents

History

Initial creation

In 1923, the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) acquired control of WJZ in Newark, New Jersey, from Westinghouse, and moved the station to New York City [1] The same year, RCA obtained a license for station WRC in Washington, D.C., and attempted to transmit audio between WJZ and WRC via low-quality telegraph lines, in an attempt to make a network comparable to that operated by American Telephone & Telegraph.

AT&T had created its own network in 1922, with WEAF in New York serving the research and development function for Western Electric's research and development of radio transmitters and antennas, as well as AT&T's long-distance and local Bell technologies for transmitting voice- and music-grade audio over short and long distances, via both wireless and wired methods. WEAF's regular schedule of a variety of programs, and its selling of commercial sponsorships, had been a success, and what was known at first as "chain broadcasting" became a network that linked WJAR in Providence, Rhode Island and AT&T's WCAP in Washington.

Since AT&T refused access of its high-quality phone lines to competitors, RCA's New York-Washington operated with uninsulated telegraph lines which were incapable of good audio transmission quality and very susceptible to both atmospheric and man-made electrical interference. In 1926, however, the management of AT&T concluded that operating a radio network was incompatible with its operation of America's telephone and telegraph service, and sold WEAF and WCAP to RCA for approximately one million dollars. As part of the purchase, RCA also gained the rights to rent AT&T's phone lines for network transmission, and the technology for operating a quality radio network.

On September 13, 1926, RCA chairman of the board Owen D. Young and president James G. Harbord announced the formation of the National Broadcasting Company, Inc.,[2] to begin broadcasting upon RCA's acquisition of WEAF on November 15. "The purpose of the National Broadcasting Company will be to provide the best programs available for broadcasting in the United States... It is hoped that arrangements may be made so that every event of national importance may be broadcast widely throughout the United States," announced M.H. Aylesworth, the first president of NBC, in the press release.[3]

Red Network and Blue Network

Although RCA was identified as the creator of the network, NBC was actually owned 50% by RCA, 30% by General Electric, and 20% by Westinghouse. The network officially was launched at 8:00 Eastern time on the evening of Monday, November 15, 1926. "The most pretentious broadcasting program ever presented, featuring among others, world famed stars never before heard on the air, will mark the Introduction of the National Broadcasting Company to the public Monday night," the press noted, with "a four hour radio performance by noted stars of opera, stage and concert hall". Carl Schlagel of the Metropolitan Opera opened the inaugural broadcast, which also featured Will Rogers and Mary Garden.[4] The broadcast was made simultaneously on WEAF and WJZ. Some of NBC's programming was broadcast that evening on WEEI (Boston) WLIT (Philadelphia), WRC (Washington), WDAF (Kansas City), and WWJ (Detroit).[3], noted by the different background color. NBC Blue would utilize this logo until their 1942 sale.]]On January 1, 1927, NBC formally divided the its programming along two networks. The two NBC networks did not have distinct identities or "formats." The NBC Red Network, with WEAF as its flagship station and a stronger line-up of affiliated stations, often carried the more popular, "big budget" sponsored programs. The Blue Network and WJZ carried with a somewhat smaller line-up of often lower powered stations sold program time to advertisers at a lower cost. It often carried newer, untried programs (which, if successful, often moved "up" to the Red Network), lower cost programs and un-sponsored or "sustaining" programs (which were often news, cultural and educational programs). In many cities in addition to New York, the two NBC affiliated stations (Red and Blue) were operated as duopolies, having the same owners and sharing the same staff and facilities.

At this time, most network programs were owned by the sponsors and produced by their advertising agencies. The networks did not control or "program" their own schedules as they do now (advertisers bought available time periods they wanted and chose the stations which would carry a particular program regardless of what other sponsors might broadcast in other time periods). Networks rented studio facilities to produce shows and sold air-time to sponsors. The only network produced programs were unsponsored programs used to fill unsold time periods (affiliated stations had the option to "break away" from the network to air a local program during these periods) but the network had the "option" to take back the time period if a network sponsor wanted the time period.[1]

Legend has it that the color designations originated from the color of the push-pins early engineers used to designate affiliates of WEAF (red pins) and WJZ (blue pins), or from the use of double-ended red and blue colored pencils. A similar two-part/two-color strategy appeared in the recording industry, dividing the market between classical and popular offerings.

On April 5, 1927 NBC reached the West Coast with the launching of the NBC Orange Network, which rebroadcast Red Network programming to the Pacific states and had as its flagship station KGO in San Francisco. NBC Red then extended its reach into the midwest by acquiring two 50,000 watt clear-channel signals, Cleveland station WTAM on October 16, 1930 and Chicago station WMAQ (coincidenally, a CBS Radio Network charter affiliate) by 1931. On October 18, 1931, Blue Network programming was introduced along the NBC Gold Network, which broadcast from San Francisco's KPO. In 1936 the Orange Network name was dropped and affiliate stations became part of the Red Network. The Gold Network adopted the Blue Network name.

NBC Red/Blue's secondary 1930s logo, commonly seen on the network's microphone flags.

In a major move in 1931, RCA signed crucial leases with the new Rockefeller Center management that resulted in it becoming the lead tenant of what was to become in 1933 its corporate headquarters, the RCA Building, at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Under the terms of the lease arrangement, this included studios for NBC and theaters for the RCA-owned RKO Pictures. The deal was arranged through the Center's founder and financier, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., with the chairman of GE, Owen D. Young, and the president of RCA, David Sarnoff.[5]

In 1939 the FCC ordered RCA to divest itself of one of the two networks. RCA fought the divestiture order, but divided NBC into two companies in 1940 in case an appeal was lost. The Blue network became the "NBC Blue Network, Inc." (now known as ABC) and the NBC Red became "NBC Red Network, Inc." Effective January 10, 1942, the two networks had their operations formally divorced, and the Blue Network was referred to on the air as either "Blue" or "Blue Network," with its official corporate name being Blue Network Company, Inc. NBC Red, on the air, became known as simply NBC on September 1, 1942.[6]

Red Network affiliates

By 1939, NBC's Red and Blue Networks, and the Columbia and Mutual Broadcasting systems, offered nationwide coverage.[7] NBC advertising rate cards of the period listed "basic" and "supplemental" affiliated stations. Advertisers were encouraged to buy time for their programs on the full "basic" line-up (plus any "supplemental" stations they wished) but this was open to negotiation. It was not unusual for Red Network advertisers to place shows on Blue Network stations in certain markets (and the other way around). Supplemental stations were generally located in smaller cities away from the network trunk lines. Such stations were usually offered to advertisers as "supplemental stations" on both the Red and Blue Network line-ups.[8]

The Red Network stations were as follows:

Notable programs

(all times EST)

After Radio's "Golden Age"

Development of FM and television

NBC and RCA were one of the key forces in the development of television in the 1930s and 1940s, dating back to New York City experimental station WX2BS in 1928. Before the American entry into World War II in 1941, WX2BS was officially licensed as WNBT. By the late 1940s, NBC would complement most of their owned-and-operated stations with a television counterpart and an FM signal.

By the end of 1950, NBC's owned-and-operated stations were located in New York City (WNBC-AM-FM, changed from WEAF in 1946, and WNBT); Chicago (WMAQ-AM-FM and WNBQ); Cleveland (WTAM-AM-FM and WNBK); Washington, D.C. (WRC-AM-FM and WNBW); Los Angeles (KNBH television); Denver (KOA, purchased in 1941 and KOA-FM); and San Francisco (KNBC-AM-FM). In 1949, NBC had also sought a TV sister for KNBC in San Francisco, but lost a bidding war with the deYoung family, then the owners of the San Francisco Chronicle. The Chronicle's station, KRON-TV would last as an NBC affiliate until 2001. NBC sold the Denver outlets to a group that included one of its radio stars, Bob Hope, in 1952.

Many NBC radio stars gravitated to television as it became more popular in the 1950s. Toscanini made his ten television appearances on NBC between 1948 and 1952. In 1950, the network sanctioned The Big Show, a 90-minute radio variety show that harked back to radio's earliest musical variety style but with sophisticated comedy and drama and featuring stage legend Tallulah Bankhead as its host. It aimed to keep classic radio alive as television matured and to challenge CBS's Sunday night lineup —much of which had jumped there from NBC in the late 1940s, including (and especially) Jack Benny. But The Big Show's initial success didn't last despite critics' praises; the show endured only two years, with NBC said to lose a million dollars on the project.

To reflect RCA's ownership of NBC, some of their radio and television stations call letters were changed to "RCA"-derived callsigns in 1954. WNBC/WNBT in New York became WRCA-AM-FM-TV, WNBW television in Washington became WRC-TV, and KNBH television in Los Angeles became KRCA. By 1960, the New York flagship radio outlets reverted back to WNBC-AM-FM and the television station became WNBC-TV. In 1962 KRCA in Los Angeles became KNBC (TV), while the former KNBC-AM-FM in San Francisco became KNBR-AM-FM. WNBQ television in Chicago would become WMAQ-TV in 1964.

During this period NBC Radio purchased three additional stations: WKNB in New Britain, Connecticut in late 1956; and WJAS and WJAS-FM in Pittsburgh, in 1957. The acquisition of WJAS was made to offset the defection of KDKA from the network several years earlier, while WKNB was a throw-in along with its sister television station. NBC had no interest in owning WKNB, a daytime-only station in the shadow of WTIC, its powerful Hartford affiliate. The network finally sold WKNB in 1960; the Pittsburgh outlets were sold in 1973.

The 1956 trade with Westinghouse

In 1956, NBC sought to get an owned-and-operated television station in the Philadelphia market, so it forced a station ownership/call sign swap with Westinghouse Broadcasting. NBC acquired Westinghouse's KYW radio and WPTZ television in Philadelphia (which became WRCV-AM-TV, for the "RCA-Victor" record label) while Westinghouse received NBC's WTAM-AM-FM and WNBK television in Cleveland (all of which took the KYW call signs).

Unhappy with the arrangement, Westinghouse took NBC to court, saying that NBC threatened to pull their TV affiliation off of both their Philadelphia and Boston stations, and withhold an affiliation from their Pittsburgh property if Westinghouse did not agree to the trade. The FCC and the Supreme Court declared the trade null and void in June 1965; the KYW call letters were moved back to Philadelphia with Westinghouse while NBC rechristened the Cleveland stations as WKYC-AM-FM-TV, a derivative of KYW. NBC kept ownership of the Cleveland radio stations until 1972 before selling them off to Ohio Communications; the AM station reverted to its original WTAM call sign in July 1996.

Monitor

NBC Radio's last major programming push, in 1955, was Monitor, a continuous, all-weekend mixture of music, news, interviews and features with a variety of hosts, including such well-known television personalities as Dave Garroway, Hugh Downs, Ed McMahon, Joe Garagiola and Gene Rayburn. The potpourri also tried to keep vintage radio alive in featuring segments from Jim and Marian Jordan (in character as Fibber McGee and Molly), Ethel and Albert and iconoclastic satirist Henry Morgan.

Monitor was a success for a number of years, but after the mid-1960s, local stations, especially in larger markets, became increasingly reluctant to break from their established formats to run non-conforming network programming. After Monitor went off the air in early 1975, there was little left of NBC Radio beyond hourly newscasts, news-related features and the half-hour long Sunday morning religious program The Eternal Light. This, combined with ABC Radio's split into four separate radio services in 1968, left NBC outnumbered with their affiliate count in comparison to ABC, CBS Radio and Mutual.

Other programming attempts

NBC "News and Information Service" logo

Later in 1975, NBC launched the NBC News and Information Service (also referred to as "NIS"), which provided up to 55 minutes of news per hour around the clock to local stations that wanted to adopt an all-news format. Not surprisingly, NIS achieved clearances on NBC's FM stations in New York (WNBC-FM, which became WNWS), Chicago (WMAQ-FM, renamed WNIS) and San Francisco (KNAI, the former KNBR-FM). WRC in Washington also picked it up, migrating their Top 40 format onto their newly-renamed FM sister station WKYS (which would be blown up weeks later in favor of disco music). Other major affiliates for the NIS service included WBAL-FM in Baltimore and KQV in Pittsburgh.

The NIS service attracted several dozen subscribers, but not enough to allow NBC to project that it would ever become profitable, and it was discontinued after two years. (KQV, however, successfully has retained the all-news format with local production to the present day.) After the demise of NIS, NBC installed a talk radio format at WRC and went with music on the FMs in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco, respectively renaming them as WYNY, WKQX, and KYUU.

Near the end of the 1970s, NBC started "The Source," a modestly successful secondary network that provided news and short features to FM rock stations. In 1981, NBC created NBC Talknet, an advice-oriented talk radio network designated for the late night hours. It was one of NBC's most successful ventures in years and lasted well into the 1990s, led by advice host Sally Jessy Raphael (until her 1987 departure) and personal finance talker Bruce Williams.

NBC made its final radio station acquisition around this time: it bought Boston beautiful music outlet WJIB in 1983 from General Electric, which was divesting itself of its radio properties.

Divestiture

NBC Radio's logo from 1979 until 1986, utilizing the "Proud N" NBC-TV logo.

On September 1, 1984, NBC would sell off WRC in Washington to Greater Media for $3.6 million. WRC was rechristened WWRC, and this sale ultimately would be the start of NBC's exit from the radio business altogether.

General Electric would reacquire NBC's parent company, RCA, in early 1986. Shortly thereafter, GE announced intentions to sell off the entire radio division. The reasons for this were threefold: first, the radio network and station group had struggled to make a profit for the past several years (compounded by flagship station WNBC having been in a severe ratings crisis due to a dayparted patchwork format). Secondly, FCC ownership rules at the time did not allow a new owner outside of broadcasting - as General Electric was a manufacturer - to own both radio and television stations in the same market. Thirdly, GE had already divested their existing radio properties (including the aforementioned WJIB), deciding that the radio business, as well as RCA's, did not fit their strategic objectives. (RCA was itself divided and spun off to Bertelsmann and Thomson SA.) Prior to 1986, operating NBC Radio was done almost out of tradition by RCA and was considered to be in the "public good," an attitude that started to change with the advent of deregulation (including the repeal of the "Fairness Doctrine").

On July 20, 1987, Westwood One acquired the assets of the NBC Radio Network, The Source and Talknet in a $50 million deal. [9][10][11] which was consummated that August 25.[12]

The remaining NBC-owned stations were sold to various buyers over the next two years, in the following manner:

KNBR and WKYS are the only remaining NBC-owned stations to have maintained their previous call signs and dial positions.

The end of NBC Radio

In 1989, the "NBC Radio Network" as an independent programming service ceased to exist, becoming a brand-name for content produced by Westwood One. The Sunday morning religious program The Eternal Light, for years the only non-news program on the networks' lineup, also ended its long run at the same time. NBC Radio's news and engineering operations in New York were moved to Arlington and combined with the Mutual Broadcasting System, which Westwood One had acquired in 1985 and essentially merged with NBC Radio. However, both networks' newscasts remained separate and distinct; while field reporters were shared, each network had different formats and anchors.

NBC Radio's logo from NBC's May 12, 1986 corporate-wide re-branding until its 2004 dissolution. Following the sale to Westwood One, a byline would be affixed in most cases. The current NBC News Radio logo is styled in the same manner.

By 1992, however, both NBC Radio and Mutual's newscasts were streamlined further and took on similar formats. The two networks aired their own newscasts between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. eastern time weekdays, but one newscast would be produced each hour for use on both networks on overnights and weekends. The only differences between those newscasts were the recorded introductions, commercials and concluding network identifications. NBC Radio's and Mutual's distinct weekend sportscasts were canceled in favor of "The Scoreboard," a generic, one-minute hourly sportscast, airing seven times each on Saturdays and Sundays.[13] As a result, most major-market NBC Radio affiliates eventually switched over to either CBS, ABC or CNN Radio throughout the 1990s, leaving only small-market and rural stations or stations that aired only the network-fed commercials.[14]

Only one new program was ever introduced by NBC following the sale: an early morning news magazine and talk show by the name of First Light, hosted by Dirk Van, which was intended as a complement to Mutual's like-formatted "America In The Morning." "The Source" and "Talknet" services would continue on for several years under the "NBC" brand. Throughout the late 1990s, the latter consisted solely of Bruce Williams' talk show until his departure from the network on June 15, 2001, thereby ending the "Talknet" service for good.

Westwood One entered into an operations agreement with Infinity Broadcasting in 1994, agreeing to handle syndication for both Don Imus and Howard Stern, while Infinity would took over Westwood One's management, sales and operations,[15] and by December 1996, CBS's new parent company, Westinghouse, acquired Infinity for just shy of $5 billion.[16] The direct descendants of the three original U.S. network companies - NBC, CBS and Mutual - had merged. On August 31, 1998, Mutual/NBC's Arlington operation closed, leaving CBS Radio staff directly responsible for the production of "Mutual" and "NBC"-branded newscasts from CBS' New York facilities.

Westwood One decided to retire the Mutual brand name as a programming service on May 17, 1999. On that same day, the production of "NBC"-branded newscasts also were limited to weekday mornings (5 a.m. - 10 a.m. EST), while CNN Radio newscasts were fed to affiliates during the rest of the day and weekends. These "NBC" newscasts, still produced by CBS Radio staff, were now just generic newscasts which had a terse "This is the NBC Radio Network" identification at the newscasts' conclusion. Otherwise, no mention of NBC was given beyond the introductory sounder at the beginning. Westwood One still promoted the NBC Radio Network on their corporate website, mentioning that "The NBC Network delivers a large audience of adult female listeners ... comprised of Adult Contemporary, Country, Oldies, Nostalgia and Jazz music stations."[14]

Meanwhile, Westwood One also began to distribute Fox News Radio in 2001 in an arrangement with the cable network of the same name, with "First Light" host Dirk Van as their first morning-drive anchor. After that arrangement ended, Westwood One launched NBC News Radio in its place on March 31, 2003, consisting of news updates read by CNBC anchors and reporters, but with the content written by Westwood One staff. In addition, these are brief one-minute news updates fed only on weekdays from 6 a.m. - 10 p.m. EST, as opposed to the original five-minute-long newscasts. Those original "NBC"-branded newscasts, overlapped with NBC News Radio's newscasts until finally ceasing production at or around May 2004.

Dial Global acquired the majority of Westwood One's assets on October 21, 2011, including the distribution rights to NBC News Radio and audio retransmissions of several NBC-TV programs, such as recaps of their late night programming and an audio simulcast of Meet The Press. Only one program from the original NBC Radio Network remains on the air: First Light, and had the NBC peacock embedded into the show logo well into the late 1990s. After the "NBC"-branded newscasts were generally phased out, the show was then branded as a Westwood One product, but host Dirk Van would still make the brief announcement, "From Westwood One, this is NBC Radio" at the halfway point and conclusion of every show.

This practice officially ended in the middle of the October 27, 2011 program, as Dial Global's purchase of Westwood One resulted in a wholesale rebranding of all Westwood One programming[17]. First Light became entirely identified as a "Dial Global Radio Network" program the next day, thereby removing the very last trace of the original network from active use.

Former NBC-owned radio stations

Note: This list does not include WJZ in New York or WENR in Chicago, which were NBC-owned Blue Network stations prior to the split of the two networks in 1942. Two other stations, WMAL in Washington, D.C. and KGO in San Francisco, are omitted; these Blue Network affiliates were managed by NBC but owned by other entities. In addition, KOA in Denver was managed by NBC from 1930 until 1941, when it was purchased by NBC.

AM Stations FM Stations
DMA# Market Station Years owned Current ownership
1. New York City WEAF/WRCA/WNBC-660
(now WFAN)
1926–1988 owned by CBS Radio
WEAF-FM/WRCA-FM/WNBC-FM/WNWS/WYNY-97.1
(now WQHT)
1940–1988 owned by Emmis Communications
3. Chicago WMAQ-670
(now WSCR)
1931–1987 owned by CBS Radio
WMAQ-FM/WJOI/WNIS-FM/WKQX-101.1
(now WWWN)
1948–1988 owned by Merlin Media LLC
4. San Francisco KPO/KNBC/KNBR-680 1932–1989 owned by Cumulus Media
KNBC-FM/KNBR-FM/KNAI-FM/KYUU-95.7
(now KMVQ-FM)
1955–1988 owned by CBS Radio
7. Philadelphia WRCV-1060
(now KYW)
1956–1965 owned by CBS Radio
9. Washington, D.C. WRC-980
(now WTEM)
1923–1984 owned by Red Zebra Broadcasting
WRC-FM/WKYS-93.9 1947–1988 owned by Radio One
10. Boston WJIB-96.9
(now WTKK)
1983–1988 owned by Greater Media
22. DenverBoulder KOA-850 1941–1952 owned by Clear Channel Communications
KOA-FM-95.7
(now KPTT)
1949–1952 owned by Clear Channel Communications
24. Pittsburgh WJAS-1320 1957–1973 owned by Renda Broadcasting
WJAS-FM-99.7
(now WSHH)
1957–1973 owned by Renda Broadcasting
28. Cleveland WTAM/WKYC-1100 1930–1956
1965–1972
owned by Clear Channel Communications
WTAM-FM/WKYC-FM-105.7
(now WMJI)
1948–1956
1965–1972
owned by Clear Channel Communications
52. Hartford - New Britain, CT WKNB-840
(now WRYM)
1956–1960 owned by Eight Forty Broadcasting Company

References

  1. ^ "Why Did WABC Have Such a Great Signal?". WABC Musicradio 77: musicradio77.com. http://www.musicradio77.com/transm.html. Retrieved 2006-08-04. 
  2. ^ "Form National Company For Broadcasting," The Syracuse Herald, September 13, 1926, p6
  3. ^ a b Id.
  4. ^ "Radio-- Notes and Programs for the Day," The North Adams Transcript (North Adams, Mass.), November 15, 1926, p.7
  5. ^ RCA Lead Tenant of Rockefeller Center - see John Ensor Harr and Peter J. Johnson, The Rockefeller Century: Three Generations of America's Greatest Family, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988. (p.326)
  6. ^ "New Company Takes Over NBC Blue Net," The Fresno Bee Republican, January 10, 1942, p 5
  7. ^ "Stations That Make Up the Networks," The Daily Mail Hagerstown, Maryland, January 14, 1939, p 9
  8. ^ "Broadcasting History - Various Articles, Part 1: Red and Blue Networks (McLeod)". Jeff Miller: jeff560.tripod.com. http://jeff560.tripod.com/am1.html. Retrieved 2010-06-15. 
  9. ^ UPI Wire Story (July 21, 1987). "GE To Sell NBC Radio Network". The Chicago Tribune. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1987-07-21/business/8702230410_1_nbc-radio-entertainment-radio-stations-final-approval-hinges. Retrieved 2010-08-10. 
  10. ^ McDougal, Dennis (July 21, 1987). "NBC Sells Its Radio Network". The Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/1987-07-21/entertainment/ca-5298_1_radio-network. Retrieved 2010-08-10. 
  11. ^ Stevenson, Richard W. (July 21, 1987). "NBC to Sell Its Radio Networks". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1987/07/21/business/nbc-to-sell-its-radio-networks.html. Retrieved 2010-08-10. 
  12. ^ Sharbutt, Jay (August 26, 1987). "NBC Radio Fires 25 In Face Of Sale". The Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/1987-08-26/entertainment/ca-2722_1_nbc-radio. Retrieved 2010-08-10. 
  13. ^ "Mutual Radio Tribute Site: The Westwood One Years - 1985 to the End: Setting Sun Under Westwood One." Written by Kenneth I. Johannessen, 2009 (available online) Johannessen notes that "some information on this page came from various issues of Billboard, Broadcasting, and Radio & Records magazines; The Seattle Times, and Variety."
  14. ^ a b Westwood One - Networks - NBC. Saved on http://www.archive.org, with the timestamp dating back to around 2002, three years after 24-hour programming on NBC Radio ceased.
  15. ^ "Company News; Westwood One Completes Purchase of Unistar Radio," New York Times, February 5, 1994 (available online).
  16. ^ "To Infinity and Beyond: Is a Radio Deal Too Big?; Westinghouse Would Own 32% of Top Markets," New York Times, June 21, 1996; "Two Radio Giants to Merge, Forming Biggest Network," New York Times, June 21, 1996; "F.C.C. Approves Merger of Westinghouse and Infinity," New York Times, December 27, 1996 (available online); "Company Briefs," New York Times, January 1, 1997 (available online).
  17. ^ "First Light: Show Archives". Dial-Global. http://www.firstlightradio.com/pg/jsp/firstlight/audioarchive.jsp. Retrieved 2011-11-12.  Of course, things are never all that simple. The show was re-branded as coming from "Dial Global" that October 21, but for several days, Dirk identified the show at those specified marks as "From the Dial Global Radio Networks, this is NBC Radio." The "NBC Radio" name was last used in the halfway point (17 minutes) into the October 27, 2011 program, and at the conclusion (28 minutes) of that same show, the Dial Global name and new network sounder was officially used for the first time.

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