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WHOF (101.7 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to North Canton, Ohio, carrying a classic hits format known as "Sunny 101.7". Owned by iHeartMedia, Inc., the station serves both the Canton and Akron metro areas and is the local affiliate for syndicated personalities Ron Wilson and Jim Brickman.
For many years, this station was known as WYSN, "Sunny 101". Licensed to Central City in Somerset County, the station first went on the air October 19, 1972 as WCCS, whose calls are used today by an AM station north of Somerset County in Homer City. The original owner of the station was Central Broadcasting Company, with Ben Jones serving as ...
7 Indonesia. 8 Mexico. 9 New Zealand. 10 Philippines. 11 United Kingdom. 12 United States (Channel 269) ... SMG Pop Music Radio in Shanghai; Panyu Radio in Panyu ...
WZUN-FM (102.1 MHz "Sunny 102") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Phoenix, New York, and serving the Syracuse metropolitan area. The station is owned by Edward Levine's Galaxy Media Partners through licensee Galaxy Syracuse Licensee LLC. [2] It airs a classic hits radio format. The studios and offices are on Walton Street in Syracuse ...
Most of its early days, WVKO-AM-FM served Columbus' black community, with R&B music. The station began broadcasting a soft adult contemporary format on August 6, 1982, when DJ Chuck Martin played The Beatles, "Here Comes the Sun" as the first song to launch "Sunny 95." It acquired the call sign WSNY to go with its Sunny branding.
WCSN-FM (105.7 MHz, "Sunny 105.7 FM") is a radio station licensed to serve Orange Beach, Alabama, United States.The station is owned by Gulf Coast Broadcasting Co., Inc. It airs a classic hits music format.
KRNO dropped its "Sunny" moniker as its prime positioner on March 24, 2014, to become "106.9 More FM." [ 4 ] The rebranding, despite the station's high ratings (the station ranked at #2 12+ among subscribing stations in the Fall 2013 Nielsen Audio ratings report [ 5 ] ), was meant to reflect the updating of the station's playlist to focus on ...
The station ran an automated adult contemporary format from 1983 through 1990. The music was a more contemporary version of the MOR format of sister station WMPX. In the summer of 1990, WMRX-FM became a direct simulcast of WMPX, and later in the year both stations became an affiliate of ABC Radio's "Star Station" adult contemporary format.