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WOOP-LP (99.9 FM, "America's Original Music") is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. [2] Licensed to Cleveland, Tennessee, United States, the station is currently owned by Traditional Music Resource Center, Inc. [3]
WKFB (770 AM) is a radio station licensed to Jeannette, Pennsylvania, that serves the greater Pittsburgh area. The station also broadcasts on 97.5 FM. The station also broadcasts on 97.5 FM. Known as "97.5 770 KFB", the station airs an oldies format featuring music from the 1950s, 1960s, and the early to mid 1970s.
His grandfather, Herman Lubinsky, Sr., founded Savoy Records in Newark, and introduced acts that would be influential in modern popular music (Doo-Wop, Motown, disco and Top 40). Lubinsky, Sr. founded and operated New Jersey's first radio station WNJ. [4] His uncle, "Buzzy", was also a well-known club disc jockey in New Jersey. [citation needed]
In the 1950s and 60s, WANN Radio in Annapolis became a beacon for Black listeners by playing music and broadcasting voices that other mainstream stations ignored.
WOOP-LP, a radio station from Tennessee, US; WOOP, former call sign for WXHT, a radio station from Florida, US; Woop, a pseudonym of guitarist Jeff Warner; Woop, an obsolete term for a bullfinch; Woop, a fictional device in The Miraculous Mellops TV series; WOOP (Wish, Outcome, Obstacle, Plan), a strategy to change habits by Gabriele Oettingen
WPWT (870 AM) is a classic country music formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Colonial Heights, Tennessee, serving the Tri-Cities, VA/TN area. WPWT is owned and operated by Kenneth Clyde Hill.
WOPG (1460 kHz) is an AM radio station licensed to Albany, New York, and serving the Capital District.It is owned by Pax et Bonum, Inc. (Peace and Goodness in Latin) and has a Christian radio format aimed at Roman Catholic listeners, with much of its programming coming from the EWTN Radio network.
WTWW, according to the FCC, [3] was originally licensed a construction permit as WBWW on June 30, 2009. Testing began in January 2010 and ending mid-February 2010. Testing frequencies used were 5.755 MHz and 9.48 MHz, and recorded by several listeners who uploaded the audio to YouTube.