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Born in Brooklyn, New York, Williams first gained minor fame in the early 1980s, as a late-night radio disc jockey on WVKO in Columbus, Ohio. After over a decade in radio, Williams was dismissed in 1994 for alcoholism and drug abuse, and he soon found himself homeless.
Runyon at KYW in 1963. Jim Runyon (January 8, 1931 – April 13, 1973) was an American radio announcer, disc jockey, and sometime actor from the late 1950s to 1973.He was in plays at Cain Park in the early ‘70s
WCOL-FM (92.3 MHz) – branded 92.3 WCOL – is a commercial country music radio station licensed to Columbus, Ohio, serving the Columbus metro area.Owned by iHeartMedia, the WCOL-FM studios are located in Downtown Columbus, while its transmitter resides northwest of downtown on the WBNS-TV tower.
WLVQ (96.3 FM) — branded Q-FM 96 — is a commercial classic rock radio station licensed to Columbus, Ohio.Owned by Saga Communications (through its Franklin Communications licensee), and operated as part of its Columbus Radio Group, the station serves the Columbus metro area.
WXGT (1580 AM) is a commercial oldies radio station licensed to serve Columbus, Ohio, serving the Columbus metropolitan area.Owned by ICS Communications, Inc., the WXGT studios are located in beautiful Downtown Lewis Center, Ohio in the Lewis Center Metroplex, while the station transmitter resides in Columbus' Brandywine neighborhood on Morse Road,
WMNI (920 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Columbus, Ohio, known as "Fox Sports 920" with a sports format. Locally owned by North American Broadcasting Company, Inc., WMNI serves the Columbus metropolitan area.
Most daytime dayparts have Spanish-speaking disc jockeys, including morning and afternoon drive times. [1] In addition to Spanish variety music, La Mega broadcasts community information and announcements targeted toward the Greater Cincinnati Latino community. On March 4, 2019, Lazo Media LLC acquired WOXY from TSJ Radio, LLC.
For weekends WGRR adopted the Hot Wax Weekend concept by adding legendary WSAI disc jockeys from the 1960s: Dusty Rhodes, Ted McAllister and Jack Stahl. Also in the original WGRR lineup was Daniel "Dangerous Dan" Allen (Saturday Night Dial-A-Hit), with Tommy "Super Tom" Schroeder who worked overnight weekends like Saturday mornings and Sunday ...