radio
- Why should it take Hillary Clinton to defend the GOP from the alt-right?
- On Saturday, family of former 92Q radio personality DJ Reggie Reg organized a block party to honor the former 92Q radio personality who died of congestive heart failure in February. At the event, a new red street sign was unveiled at 1800 N. Payson St., renaming it "DJ Reggie Reg Way."
- Stacia Brown's voice pours through speakers like velvet as she helps deliver a collection of narratives from some of the city's long-standing, nostalgia-inducing sites in her podcast "Baltimore: The Rise of Charm City."
- Deborah Davis, a longtime employee of WYPR public radio station with a passion for theatre, music and equality, died on Dec. 23 at Gilchrist Hospice Care after battling cancer. She was 61.
- As Baltimore grapples head on with its own fraught police-community relations, the Rev. David Anderson is in Ferguson, on a trip scheduled long ago to check in on the progress of the discussions he facilitated there.
- Former Gov. Martin O'Malley used a curse word on a nationally broadcast radio program Monday morning, and on Monday afternoon started using it to solicit donations for his potential bid for president.
- If you¿re trying to find a way to listen or watch Friday¿s home opener, the Orioles switched flagship radio stations in January. CBS Radio's WJZ (105.7 FM) will broadcast all 162 regular-season games, as well as pregame and postgame shows.
- William "Bill" Toohey, the former the spokesman for the Baltimore County Police Department, died Thursday, his son Liam announced.
- Starting Wednesday, Harford County's 200,000-plus 911 calls will be dispatched from a new and, according to county officials, much-improved location.
- Baltimore sports radio personality and coach Rob Long has a new part-time job: coach of the Mount Carmel girls basketball team.
- Veteran DJs Tim Watts and Lolo are no longer on the air at Baltimore's Magic 95.9
- The Orioles announced Monday that they have signed a multiyear deal with CBS Radio's WJZ-FM 105.7 The Fan to become the club's flagship radio station. The station will broadcast all 162 regular-season games and select spring training games, as well as pregame and postgame shows.
- Mary Torrieri, the host of an Italian-American radio program who was also active in local charities, died of heart failure Dec. 29 at Riderwood Village in Rockville. The former Towson resident was 94.
- Laurel police announced Wednesday that three people have been arrested and will be charged in what they called a theft scheme orchestrated by two employees and a former employee of the Laurel Radio Shack.
- Live radio broadcast at Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Catonsville ended Nov. 23, but will continue streaming live on the Internet.
- 56-year-old Ellicott City resident Bill Vanko is a wildlife photographer, training the lens of his Canon 7D on varied landscapes to capture and illuminate strikingly intricate images. His inquisitiveness, he notes, dovetails perfectly with his full-time job as a news anchor and reporter for WBAL radio.
- Frederick Keys join effort to promote Maryland's health exchange during open enrollment with radio ads
- Center Stage presents adaptation of popular 1946 holiday movie "It's a Wonderful Life" in the form of a radio play, with actors assuming multiple roles.
- You can return to Bedford Falls this season via a "live radio play" at Center Stage.
- Barbara J. Smith-Cox, news director of WNAV-AM in Annapolis who began her radio career in Tampa, died Nov. 14 at her Arnold home of a cardiac arrest. She was 55.
- Orioles first baseman Chris Davis broke his silence about his 25-game suspension for a failed drug test when he touched on the subject in an interview this week with a local Christian radio station.
- Sports talk host Glenn Clark, who was fired earlier this year in the downsizing at radio station WNST, is starting a new daily online show Monday at 10 a.m.
- Joe Knight, a legendary Baltimore radio personality who was known to several generations of WFBR and WCBM listeners as "Joe Knight, the Knight of the Spinning Roundtable," died Saturday at Hope Hospice in Forth Myers, Fla., of complications from a broken hip. He was 87.
- Baltimore County State's Attorney Scott Shellenberger is featured in a new radio ad supporting Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown's gubernatorial run, as Democrats try to win over county voters in the final stretch before Election Day.
- A peculiar 7-Eleven robbery occurred Wednesday in Baltimore though it may not be the one recorded on a sports radio show
- Some of Baltimore¿s frontline musical talent graced national airwaves during Wednesday's NPR show, "World Café: Sense of Place," a show that highlights essential and emerging artists.
- The Democrat and Republican running to be lieutenant governor have agreed to debate on a Washington radio show next week, the first publicly broadcast showdown between the men vying to be No.2 in the next administration.
- Ravens wide receiver Steve Smith ripped Carolina Panthers management on Charlotte radio.
- For many Baltimoreans, the story of the Orioles is the story of their family. It's a way for fathers and sons to talk, for mothers and daughters to celebrate, for grandparents to share an interest with grandchildren.
- Democratic gubernatorial candidate Anthony G. Brown and Republican rival Larry Hogan have agreed to meet in a third televised TV debate next month, WBAL-TV in Baltimore confirmed Tuesday.
- Brad Kolodner isn't just following in his father's footsteps by performing folk, bluegrass and other traditional music. Brad, 24, is an impresario of sorts, organizing jam sessions and square dancing events in a effort to get young people interested in traditional music.
- Ellicott City resident and college basketball official enlists the helps sports world to fight Sarcoidosis
- Robert I. "Bob" Callahan, a veteran Baltimore broadcaster who worked in both radio and television and in early June was honored with a star on Maryland Public Television's Walk of Fame, died Aug. 28 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Miami, Fla. He was 76.
- On Tuesday her acrobatic gymnastics crew, AcroArmy, was scheduled to compete as one of the final 12 teams on the NBC prime time television show "America's Got Talent." Three of the 18 AcroArmy team members reign from the Baltimore area: Twenty-year-old Emily Ruppert of Arbutus, 18-year-old Chrissy Antoniades of Sykesville and 15-year-old Hannah Silverman of Clarksville.