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WHKO (99.1 FM, "K99.1FM") is a commercial radio station in Dayton, Ohio.The station is owned by Cox Media Group and carries a country music radio format.Its studios and offices are co-located with the Dayton Daily News, WHIO-AM-FM-TV, and two more radio stations in the Cox Media Center building near downtown Dayton.
WHIO (1290 kHz) – branded AM 1290 and News 95.7 WHIO – is a commercial radio station in Dayton, Ohio. It simulcasts a news/talk radio format with sister station WHIO-FM 95.7. They are owned by the Cox Media Group. [3] The studios are at the Cox Media Center on South Main Street (Ohio State Route 48) in Dayton. WHIO is powered at 5,000 watts.
1 S. Main Street: 336 (102) 20: 1989: The building was once known as One Dayton Centre until Fifth Third Bank became the prime tenant in 2009. [8] [9] 4: Grant-Deneau Tower: 40 W. Fourth Street: 331 (101) 22: 1969: This was the tallest building in Dayton for about a year until the Kettering Tower claimed this designation in 1970. [10] 5: 110 N ...
Around this same time the former WHIO-FM switched from a similar format to country as WHKO "K-99.1 FM". In 1997, WLSN was sold to Jacor Communications , later becoming WBKI ("Buckeye Country 106.5") in 1998 competing with WHKO until the merger with Clear Channel becoming WDJO (a call sign used previously at 1230 AM in Cincinnati ) as "Dayton's ...
Call sign Frequency Band City of license [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; WABQ: 1460: AM: Painesville: Radio Advantage One, LLC. Gospel music: WAGX: 101.3: FM: Manchester ...
WCLI-FM (101.5 FM, "Hank FM") is a classic country radio station, licensed to Enon, Ohio, and serving the Dayton area. The station is owned by Alpha Media . Its studios are located in Kettering, Ohio (with a Dayton address) and its transmitter is in New Carlisle, Ohio , northeast of Dayton.
WCHD (99.9 FM, "Channel 999") is a commercial radio station licensed to Kettering, Ohio, and serving the Dayton metropolitan area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and airs a contemporary hit radio format. Its studios are located just outside downtown Dayton and its transmitter is off Sandridge Drive near Interstate 75 in Moraine, Ohio.
In spring 2002, fellow Dayton station WKEF took over the channel 51 slot for its digital allocation, leaving WRCX-LP without an over-the-air signal for a time, though it remained on channel 22 for much of the area's Time Warner Cable subscribers. The station soon gained approval to broadcast on channel 40.