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Iron River Community Broadcasting Corporation: Classic country WFFR-LP: 100.9 FM: Roosevelt Park: Shoreline Broadcasting, Inc: Classic hits WFGR: 98.7 FM: Grand Rapids: Townsquare Media of Grand Rapids, Inc. Classic hits WFLT: 1420 AM: Flint: Christian Evangelical Broadcasting Association: Gospel WFMK: 99.1 FM: East Lansing: Townsquare License ...
WCCY (1400 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a contemporary hit radio format. Licensed to Houghton, Michigan, it first began broadcasting in 1929. It is owned by Morgan Murphy Media. The studios are at 313 E. Montezuma, Houghton. It shares this location with its sister stations, WOLV and WHKB.
WOLV (97.7 MHz "The Wolf") is an FM radio station licensed to Houghton, Michigan, broadcasting a classic hits format. The studios are at 313 E. Montezuma in Houghton, a location it shares with its sister stations, WCCY and WHKB. The station first went on the air in January 1980 as WHUH. In 1990, the station's call letters were changed to WOLF-FM.
WHKB (102.3 FM, "K-Bear 102") is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. The studios are at 313 E. Montezuma, Houghton. It shares this location with its sister stations, WOLV and WCCY. Licensed to Houghton, Michigan, it first began broadcasting under the WAAH call sign.
WCGO (1590 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Evanston, Illinois, and serving the Chicago metropolitan area's northern suburbs. The station is owned by Jorge Rodriquez through licensee Ambiente Clasico LLC.
Former studio and transmitter site in Chicago's Cragin neighborhood. In late 1991, the station was sold to Diamond Broadcasting. [68] [69] At 7:15 a.m. on January 2, 1992, it returned to the air from a new site in Chicago's Cragin neighborhood, though without nighttime operations. [70] [71] It became WSCR "The Score," the first all-sports ...
In September 2023, it was announced that The Marks Group would sell its Michigan broadcasting properties—WBUP, WBKP, WBKB-TV, and radio stations in Houghton and Iron River—to Morgan Murphy Media for $13.375 million. [1] The sale was completed on December 4. [4]
In 1981, the station was sold to Robert Snyder's Snyder Broadcasting for $1 million, and it began airing show tunes. [ 6 ] [ 10 ] [ 11 ] [ 5 ] Snyder Broadcasting filed for bankruptcy on December 29, 1982, and the station was taken off the air in October 1983 and remained off the air for over a year until it was repurchased by Frank and Lois ...