SynonymsBot
Synonyms for wusf or Related words with wusf
wpbt
wfsu
wmfe
wxel
wucf
wfyi
wuft
wgvu
wmor
wlae
wnye
wkyu
woay
kbyu
wbki
wlny
wcax
wmht
knwa
kuht
kvcr
krcb
wjax
kjzz
wsiu
ktwu
wcny
kwbu
kfsm
wptv
wtjx
whyy
wned
wipb
wcfe
wosu
kofy
wfwa
koce
wfmj
wtvc
wvia
kdoc
wrnn
wbng
klbk
kmbh
kvpt
ksws
ktal
Examples of "wusf"
Owned by USF,
WUSF
(FM) first began airing in 1963. A member station of National Public Radio, the broadcast studio is located on the USF Tampa campus. Currently, the FM station broadcasts NPR and local news during the day and jazz music in the overnight hours. The station is funded by local corporate and private contributors, as well as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and is affiliated with the Public Broadcasting Service. In 2003,
WUSF
89.7 became the first public radio station in the nation to broadcast a digital signal. Today,
WUSF
Public Media offers local and national news coverage, educational programming, and jazz and classical music through
WUSF
89.7,
WUSF
89.7², WSMR 89.1,
WUSF
-TV, IntellisMedia, and
WUSF
New Media.
On October 12, 2015, the University of South Florida voted to explore placing
WUSF
-TV into the Federal Communications Commission's spectrum auction in 2016, a move that could lead to the station sharing a channel with another area station, moving its signal to a VHF channel, or ceasing operations altogether. On February 8, 2017, USF announced that the
WUSF
-TV license had been sold for $18.8 million in the auction, and that the station will cease operations later in the year. USF's radio operations,
WUSF
FM and WSMR, are not affected by the planned shutdown of
WUSF
-TV. PBS programming will remain on WEDU after
WUSF
-TV goes dark.
In 2010 the campus became the home of a new facility for the radio and television networks of the university,
WUSF
(FM), WSMR (FM), and
WUSF
-TV that are part of the public broadcasting network.
The album has been played on
WUSF
89.7 and the BBC Radio "BBC Jazz From England".
WUSF
(89.7 FM) is the flagship National Public Radio member station in the Tampa Bay area. It is licensed to Tampa and owned by the University of South Florida.
WUSF
signed on in 1963, seven years after USF's founding in 1956. It joined NPR in 1976, the year the Tampa Bay area entered the major leagues.
On February 8, 2017, USF announced that the license for secondary PBS outlet
WUSF
-TV had been sold for $18.8 million in the FCC spectrum auction, and that it will cease operations later in the year. WEDU will become the Tampa Bay Area's sole PBS station after
WUSF
-TV goes dark.
WGCU-FM first signed on in 1983 as WSFP-FM, a station owned by the University of South Florida in Tampa, owners of public broadcasting stations
WUSF
FM and TV. At the time, Fort Myers / Naples was the only media market in Florida without any public broadcasting stations. WSFP-FM was largely a rebroadcast of
WUSF
-FM.
WUSF
-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 16, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 34, using PSIP to display
WUSF
-TV's virtual channel as 16 on digital television receivers.
The station first signed on the air on September 12, 1966.
WUSF
-TV's main rival is fellow PBS member station WEDU (channel 3), which has long been one of the highest-rated public television stations in the country. However, due to its ties with the University of South Florida, most of WUSF's programming is educational in nature – including distance learning, which
WUSF
broadcasts during the afternoon and late-night hours.
WUSF
was also known for showing a wide variety of home improvement programming, such as "Hometime," during the late 1980s and 1990s that WEDU did not regularly program.
WUSF
-TV, virtual channel 16 (UHF digital channel 34), is a PBS member television station located in Tampa, Florida, United States and also serving the nearby city of St. Petersburg. The station is owned by the University of South Florida.
WUSF
maintains studio facilities located on the University of South Florida campus on East Fowler Avenue on the city's northeast side, and its transmitter is located in Riverview, Florida.
On the day of WSMR's closure, the University of South Florida announced its intention to acquire WSMR, with plans to change the station's format to classical music, while reimaging Tampa's
WUSF
FM as a station carrying National Public Radio-based talk programming by day and jazz at night. USF has moved the station slightly closer to the Tampa Bay area; WSMR's coverage is primarily the Sarasota-Bradonton area. However, the station's programming is also heard on
WUSF
-HD2. WUSF's main frequency began broadcasting an NPR News and talk schedule on September 15, 2010; however, WSMR failed to launch on that date as previously announced. Various explanations were offered by
WUSF
, including delays due to FCC approval, and an undefined technical issue relating to another frequency assigned to "first responders" at the same tower site.
The station first signed on the air on August 15, 1983 as WSFP-TV. It was originally owned by the University of South Florida in Tampa, owners of Tampa Bay's secondary PBS member station,
WUSF
-TV, and primary NPR member
WUSF
-FM. At the time, the Fort Myers/Naples area was the only media market in Florida without a public television station of any sort that was available over-the-air. Area cable providers usually piped WEDU in Tampa or WPBT in Miami, depending on the location. WSFP-TV operated as a typical PBS member station.
Major television stations include WFTS 28 (ABC), WTSP 10 (CBS), WFLA 8 (NBC), WTVT 13 (Fox), WTOG 44 (The CW), WTTA 38 (MyNetworkTV), WEDU 3 (PBS),
WUSF
-TV 16 (PBS), WMOR 32 (Independent), WXPX 66 (ION), WCLF 22 (CTN), WFTT 50 (UniMás) and WVEA 62 (Univision).
A former award-winning journalist, Smith has written syndicated columns for various gay and mainstream publications. Smith was an award-winning investigative journalist for
WUSF
, the National Public Radio affiliate in Tampa, and later became a reporter for the Tampa Tribune. Smith also freelanced for national and local publications.
In May 1991, Niemeyer travelled on an Arthur-F.-Burns scholarship to the United States. She stayed four months at the WABI TV CBS branch in Bangor, Maine, and
WUSF
public radio station in Tampa, Florida. Between 1991 and 1994, she worked as Berlin and East Germany correspondent for "O137" interview magazine of the Pay TV broadcast station Premiere.
The station converted to digital in October 2011, flash cutting on channel 43. The station has an application to move to channel 16, as well as a Construction Permit to move to digital channel 22; both of these are on frequencies vacated by
WUSF
-TV and WCLF, respectively.
Le Mignot began her broadcasting career while she was in college, working from 1989 until 1993 at the University of South Florida-owned, PBS-affiliated,
WUSF
-TV in Tampa, Florida as a production assistant and associate producer. She also worked as a news anchor and reporter in Belgrade, Serbia from 1991 until 1992.
WEDU, virtual channel 3 (VHF digital channel 13), is a PBS member television station located in Tampa, Florida, United States and serves the Tampa Bay Area including St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Sarasota and Lakeland. The station is owned by Florida West Coast Public Broadcasting. WEDU's studio facilities are located on North Boulevard in Tampa, and its transmitter is located in Riverview. WEDU is one of two PBS stations in the Tampa Bay market. It carries the main PBS schedule, while
WUSF
-TV, channel 16, carries alternate PBS programming.
The Tampa Bay area is the nation's 19th-largest radio market, according to Arbitron Research. More than 70 radio stations, split almost evenly between the AM and FM band. Most major programming formats are represented by the corporations of Clear Channel Communications the biggest owner of radio stations in the area, followed by Cox Media Group and CBS Radio. The area is also home to at least two non-profit radio stations, WMNF and
WUSF
. Christian stations include including The Joy FM and WBVM. In addition, many Orlando-area stations can be heard in the northern and eastern reaches of the metropolitan area.
Seel began his radio career at
WUSF
in Tampa, FL as a classical music host before moving to WNED-FM in Buffalo, NY where he hosted weekday afternoons and also created the experimental music program "Present Tense". Seel joined Minnesota Public Radio in 1999 originally as a host for the nationally syndicated classical service Classical 24. He has been a Current DJ since its launch in 2005. After MPR's "The Morning Show" ended in December 2008, Seel has co-hosted weekday mornings with Jill Riley from 6am to 10am.