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The New York Yankees Radio Network is an Audacy -owned radio network that broadcasts New York Yankees baseball games to 52 stations across 8 states. [1] The network's flagship station is WFAN, which succeeded sister station WCBS as the flagship in 2014; WCBS had aired Yankees broadcasts since the network was founded in 2002 while WFAN had been ...
In March 2023, YES launched a direct-to-consumer streaming service that included access to a 24/7 feed of YES Network and all New York Yankees, Brooklyn Nets and New York Liberty games appearing on YES. The service is only available in areas where YES is also featured on local cable. The service costs $24.99 per month or $239.99 a year.
TV: YES Network, or Amazon Prime Video in New York Radio : WFAN ( 660 AM ) and WFAN-FM ( 101.9 FM ) in New York; New York Yankees Radio Network ; WADO ( 1280 AM ) (Spanish) (Cadena Radio Yankees) Longest serving Yankee broadcasters (all-time with 10+ years)
April 16, 2024 at 8:48 PM. First Yankees fans lost their radio voice when John Sterling abruptly retired, and Tuesday night they lost audio during the TV broadcast. For about five minutes during ...
New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi stands with Joan Steinbrenner during a tribute for her husband the late George Steinbrenner before a baseball spring training game against the Philadelphia ...
On Tuesday, the company's television subsidiary, the YES Network, announced it was selling 49 percent of its business in a deal that values the network at $3 billion. That's a lot of scratch for ...
Michael Kay (born February 2, 1961) is an American sports broadcaster who is the television play-by-play broadcaster of the New York Yankees and host of CenterStage on the YES Network, and the host of The Michael Kay Show heard on WEPN-FM in New York City and simulcast on ESPN Xtra on XM Satellite Radio. Kay also works on the MLB on ESPN.
Waldman has worked in sports reporting for more than 30 years. She was a reporter for the YES Network's Yankees pre-and post-game shows, and also appeared on New York sports radio station WFAN. Her voice—on a live sports update—was the first heard on WFAN when it premiered on 1050 AM at 3:00 PM on July 1, 1987 (it moved to 660 AM a year later).