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WOKQ (97.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. The station serves the Merrimack Valley , the New Hampshire Seacoast , and York County, Maine , including the cities of Manchester and Portsmouth .
Cincinnati. WFTK – 96.5 – Active rock [32] WGRR – 103.5 – Classic hits; WNNF – 94.1 – Country [16] WOFX-FM – 92.5 – Classic rock; WRRM – 98.5 – Adult contemporary; Toledo/Monroe. WKKO – 99.9 – Country; WMIM – 98.3 – Country/Nash Icon; WQQO – 105.5 – 90s/2000s hits; WQQO-HD2 – 100.7 – ESPN Radio; WRQN – 93.5 ...
WJVS Cincinnati (surrendered in 2012) WKJH-LP Bryan (cancelled in 2023) WLBJ-LP Fostoria (2015–2020) WLMH Morrow (cancelled in 2012) WLQR Toledo (1954–2016) WMH Cincinnati (1921–1923) WMVO Mount Vernon (1953–2023) WNSD Cincinnati (1972–1978) WHBD/WPAY Bellefontaine; moved to Mt. Orab in 1929 and Portsmouth in 1935 (1925–2011) WWGH-LP
In 2000, as a result of a merger between Clear Channel and another owner of radio stations, AMFM, the new larger company wanted to spin off some of its stations. WQOK was sold to Radio One (now called Urban One ), along with current sister stations 107.1 WFXC , 104.3 WFXK , and 103.9 WNNL . [ 10 ]
Callsign Frequency City of license WPAC: 98.7 FM: Ogdensburg, New York: WPAE: 89.7 FM: Centreville, Mississippi: WPAI: 90.7 FM: Nanty Glo, Pennsylvania: WPAK-FM: 106.9 FM
Based in Oxford, Ohio, WOXR broadcast a top 40 format at 97.7 FM, largely targeted at Miami University students. WOXR also played listener requests. During the 1970s, WOXR featured a blend of top 40 and progressive rock during the day, an hour-long oldies show at 5:00 PM, with the evening music again a top-40/album rock mix that became more and more album-oriented as the night got later.
Previous version of logo. WROK-FM signed on the air in 1949, and in 1976, the call letters changed to the current WZOK. In late 1980, WZOK changed their format from album-oriented rock to its current top 40/CHR format, and was the dominant CHR station in the Rockford metropolitan area, including portions of Northern Illinois such as Belvidere, Cherry Valley, DeKalb, and Woodstock, and portions ...
The station went on the air in June 1987 [1] as WQMI with a middle of the road format. In 1989, it became WCQL-FM as "Cool 95.3" with an oldies format. That was dropped in August 1996 in favor of a contemporary hit radio format, WXHT ("Heat 95.3"), which placed a heavy emphasis on 1980s new wave hits.