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WMIA-FM (93.9 FM, "Magic 93.9") is a radio station licensed to Miami Beach, Florida.Owned by iHeartMedia, the station carries a Spanish-language format featuring a mixture of Latin pop and English-language adult contemporary hits.
My FM logo, 2013 to 2017 My FM Christmas logo On June 17, 2013, at 9 am, Clear Channel re-launched WLIT as "93.9 My FM" and retired the Lite FM brand in Chicago after 24 years. The first song on "My FM" was " Teenage Dream " by Katy Perry .
On November 20, 2010, at 7 am, due to underwhelming ratings with their mainstream rock format, WHDR began stunting with Christmas music, with a new format to debut after the holidays. At midnight on December 26, the station flipped to soft AC as "Easy 93.1".
From 2003-2011, "The Mix" aired Christmas music from November through Christmas Day every year. WRIT-FM began competing with WMYX on a yearly basis starting in 2005, when it switched to a Christmas format during the holiday season. In 2007, the holiday format started unusually early, as WMYX began its Christmas music programming on November 1.
"You for Christmas" is a song by American singer Kelly Clarkson from the deluxe reissue of her ninth studio album and second Christmas album When Christmas Comes Around.... She and Andrew Wyatt co-wrote the track with its producer Mark Ronson. The song was released by Atlantic Records on September 27, 2024. This is the first time she has ...
WNCB (93.9 FM), known as "B93.9", is a country music radio station that serves the Raleigh-Durham market of North Carolina. It is owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc., whose sister stations include WDCG, WTKK, WRDU, and W237BZ. The station was formerly licensed to Burlington, North Carolina, which is part of the Piedmont Triad market.
93.9 FM signed on the air in 1957, as KPOL-FM, a simulcast of KPOL (1540 AM) with an easy listening format. In 1977, under the ownership of Capital Cities Communications, KPOL-FM broke away from the simulcast and adopted a soft rock format similar to crosstown KNX-FM using the on-air identity "94 FM".
For a short time in 1975, the two stations simulcast Top 40 music as listeners were redirected to 93.9 FM. Shortly after the simulcast was discontinued, WKYS decided to modify its Top 40 sound. Instead of a blend of rock, pop and R&B hits, all popular on Top 40 stations, management noticed the coming boom in disco music . [ 5 ]