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Radio One then completed this acquisition during the fourth quarter of 2004, under the name ROA Licenses (Radio One Atlanta Licenses), which also owned WJZZ-FM, WPZE, and WHTA. In October 2005, the station changed format to Urban Adult Contemporary with the addition of current R&B and soul songs, but moved back to an older playlist several ...
In early July 2012, W275BK switched from airing "Hot 107-9" (WHTA FM 107.9) to Praise 102.5 , while still listing WAMJ as the primary station, both with the FCC and in the required hourly station IDs. The hourly ID lists all three stations (WPZE, WAMJ HD2, and W275BK) at every hour, rather than omitting the translator's callsign except for ...
On February 16, 2009, the "Praise 97.5" format and WPZE call sign was moved to 102.5 FM. 97.5 FM then began simulcasting WJZZ-FM as "Majic 107.5 | 97.5" (and would adopt the WUMJ call letters). After seven and a half years at 102.5, the WAMJ call sign returned to 107.5 on February 27, 2009.
Co-host Kurt Van Auken announced he would be leaving the show Wednesday in a teary goodbye to his team and listeners.
This page was last edited on 1 February 2025, at 15:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
KPZK-FM (102.5 MHz, better known locally as Praise 102.5 FM) plays a gospel format in the Little Rock metropolitan area. It is under ownership of The Last Bastion Station Trust, LLC. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the transmitter tower is located in Cabot. Former logo
After the Beatles stunt concluded, the station changed its call letters to WMYI, playing adult contemporary music and calling itself "MY 102.5." The new format kicked off with a 102-day music marathon playing over 41,000 songs in a row. WMYI enjoyed success with the popular "Love and Hudson Morning Show."
The station's original construction permit was granted by the Federal Communications Commission on January 2, 1947; it was initially assigned the call sign WMMB, but changed to WMMW on March 4. [4] It began broadcasting June 8, 1947, on 1470 kHz with 1,000 watts of power.