WWNA

WWNA (1340 AM, "Una 98.3") is a radio station licensed to serve Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. The station is owned by Dominga Barreto Santiago, through licensee DBS Radio, Inc.[2] It airs a Spanish Variety format.[3][4]

WWNA
CityAguadilla, Puerto Rico
Frequency1340 kHz
BrandingUna 98.3 FM & 1340 AM
SloganLa Estación de las Estrellas
Programming
FormatSpanish Variety
Ownership
OwnerDominga Barreto Santiago
(DBS Radio, Inc.)
Sister stationsWCMA
WDNO
WLUZ
WZCA
WLYM-LP
History
First air dateSeptember 6, 1956
Former call signsWGRF (1956-1964)
WUNA (1964-1988)
WNOZ (1988-1999)[1]
Technical information
Facility ID49815
ClassB
Power950 watts
Transmitter coordinates18°24′0″N 67°09′48″W
Translator(s)W252EH (98.3 MHz, Aguadilla)
Links
Webcastmms://wm.eleden.com/radiouna
Websitehttp://radiouna1340.com/

The station was assigned the WWNA call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on September 24, 1999.[1]

Ownership

In August 2004, Dominga Barreto Santiago reached an agreement to purchase WWNA from Aureo Matos for a reported sale price of $500,000.[5] At the time of the sale, the station aired a Spanish-language Beautiful Music and Talk radio format.[6] Barreto Santiago transferred WWNA's broadcast license to her wholly owned company DBS Radio, Inc. effective September 19, 2014.

Translator stations

Broadcast translators of WWNA
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
FCC info
W252EH98.3 FMAguadilla, Puerto Rico.25FCC

Logos

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gollark: It *could* actually be a really good dataset for teaching ML stuff conversation, apart from all the various horrible privacy (and quality) problems.
gollark: Their CDN is images mostly so it would be annoying to analyze, I'd mostly want message text.
gollark: I guess I'd only have to afford them for a bit until I can dump all their data onto my 500GB backup disk.

References

  1. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. Jacobs, George (2007). National Radio: Puerto Rico (US Associated). World Radio TV Handbook 2007: The Directory of Global Broadcasting. Billboard Books. pp. 305–306. ISBN 0-8230-5997-9.
  3. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  4. Torres, Jaime (2003-03-18). "Pequeños radiodifusores atraviesan su peor crisis de la historia". El Nuevo Día (Puerto Rico) (in Spanish).
  5. Carnegie, Jim (2005-01-13). "Transactions". Radio Business Report.
  6. "Changing Hands". Broadcasting & Cable. 2004-08-30.


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