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The station was launched at 101.1 MHz on January 20, 1969 as CJET-FM, a sister station to the AM radio station CJET. The station on 101.1 changed its callsign to CKUE-FM in the early 1970s. In 1984, the stations were acquired by CHEZ-FM Inc., the owner of Ottawa's CHEZ. In 1986, CKUE-FM changed its callsign to CHEQ-FM, and adopted the Q101 brand.
WNOE-FM (101.1 MHz) is a country music station based in New Orleans, Louisiana. The iHeartMedia outlet broadcasts with an ERP of 100 kW. Its transmitter is located in New Orleans' East Area, and its studios are located downtown.
The station airs a Classic country format and is currently owned by Mid-America Radio Group, Inc. The station sign-on as WMYJ moved to 101.1. [2] On November 21, 2016, 101.1 FM swap call letters with 88.9 FM, while WMYJ-FM moved back to 88.9 FM, the station began stunting with Christmas music. [3]
WHSM-FM (101.1 MHz, "Musky 101") is a radio station licensed to serve Hayward, Wisconsin, United States. The station is owned by Civic Media. WHSM-FM broadcasts a country music format. Its studios and transmitter are located at 16880 W. Highway 63, west of downtown Hayward.
In May 2006, WRIF outlasted yet another rock station but with a twist. 106.7 "The Drive" switched to country (this time as "106.7 The Fox") just as it did back in 1980 when it was known as "W4". WRIF was 1 out of the 4 radio stations (along with WMXD, WMUZ and WJZZ) in the Barden, Michigan area that was used on Barden Cablevision's character ...
WGRY-FM (101.1 MHz, "Up North Sports Radio") is a radio station broadcasting a sports format. Licensed to Roscommon, Michigan, it first began broadcasting in 1990.WGRY-FM is owned by Sheryl and Gerald Coyne, through licensee Blarney Stone Broadcasting, Inc., and is co-owned with WMQU and WQON, at its facilities in Grayling.
KXIA (101.1 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station broadcasting a Country radio format. [2] It is licensed to Marshalltown, Iowa, and serves the Des Moines metropolitan area. The station is currently licensed to Trending Media, Inc. [3] KXIA is powered at 100,000 watts, the maximum for non-grandfathered FM radio stations in the U.S
On November 28, 2017, the then-WVES changed their format to classic country, branded as "Wow 99.3 & 101.1" (simulcast with WICO-FM 101.1 in Snow Hill, Maryland). [3] On December 12, 2017, WVES swapped call signs with WOWZ-FM 101.5 to go with the "Wow" branding.