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WIVK-FM (107.7 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Knoxville, Tennessee.The station is owned by Cumulus Media and broadcasts a country music radio format known as "107.7 WIVK {wih-vik}" The studios and offices are on Old Kingston Pike in the Sequoyah Hills section of West Knoxville.
91.9 FM: Clarksville: Austin Peay State University: College WASL: 100.1 FM: Dyersburg: Dr Pepper Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Dyersburg, LLC: Adult hits WATO: 106.1 FM: Oliver Springs: Loud Media LLC: Alternative rock WAUO: 90.7 FM: Hohenwald: American Family Association: Religious talk WAUV: 89.7 FM: Ripley: American Family Association ...
99.1 FM Full-time repeater of flagship station WNML-AM 990 WIVK: 107.7 FM Football and Men's Basketball only Baxter (Cookeville) WBXE: 93.7 FM Bolivar: WMOD: 96.7 FM Football and women's basketball Bristol (Kingsport/Johnson City, Tennessee/Bristol, Virginia) WOPI: 1490 AM Brownsville: WTBG: 95.3 FM Football only Camden: WRJB: 98.3 FM Carthage ...
98.7 FM WUTK: Knoxville: Tennessee: University of Tennessee: 90.3 FM WUTM: Martin: Tennessee: University of Tennessee at Martin: ... 89.9 FM Internet stations
WHHM-FM (107.7 MHz, "Star 107.7") is a radio station broadcasting an adult contemporary music format. [2] Licensed to Henderson, Tennessee, United States, the station is owned by Thomas Radio, LLC. [3] In 2015, the station transitioned from an adult contemporary music format to a hot AC music mix. As of January 2021, though, the station had ...
Two years later, B.P. Broadcasters purchased WLIL-AM-FM, which at the time ran country music formats, for $1 million. [5] B.P. built a new FM tower in the Glendale community near the Loudon-Blount county line. [4] The call letters of the FM station were changed to WKZX-FM on September 20, 2000, and the station changed formats to adult contemporary.
Although few people had FM radios, Wilkerson also applied for an FM station at 100.3. In 1956, WSM in Nashville, Tennessee closed its FM station, and Wilkerson did the same, believing that if such a big station couldn't succeed, he had no chance. Knoxville got its first FM station in 1966, and Wilkerson realized he may have made a mistake.
In France this frequency is used by low power transmitters along the motorways/highways to provide traffic information services to drivers. Several networks (e.g. Radio Vinci Autoroutes, Autoroute Info, Sanef 107,7) air their programme on FM 107.7 by low power transmitters, which can only be received on the highways and in a short distance away from the highway.