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KWVR studios in Enterprise, Oregon. KWVR-FM (92.1 MHz, "Music Country") is a radio station licensed to serve Enterprise, Oregon, United States. The station, which began broadcasting in 1987, is owned by Wallowa Valley Radio, LLC.
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of Oregon, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, cities of license, licensees, and programming formats. List of radio stations
The station is owned by the Pacific Empire Radio Corporation. KUBQ broadcasts a country music format to eastern Oregon. [3] All five stations owned and operated by Pacific Empire Radio Corporation, in Eastern Oregon, share a radio studio building in La Grande, Oregon, located at 2510 Cove Ave. [4]
It intended to sign on the station with a country music format, and the "CW" in the station's calls would have held a dual meaning for 'country and western' had it gone to plan. KUPL (98.7), which had been an easy listening station on FM, instead had the country format airing on sister station 1330 AM KUPL bumped to 98.7 on February 24, 1984.
The 910 AM frequency was signed on the air in 1939 as KVAN, airing a country music format in the 1950s. After being sold to the Star Stations group in 1959, KVAN began stunting with a loop of "Teenage Bill of Rights" by Robby John and the Seven-Teens for a full day on April 30, 1959, before the station relaunched as a Top 40 station with their call-letters changed to KISN a day later on May 1 ...
KWJJ-FM (99.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Portland, Oregon. It is owned by Audacy, Inc. and airs a country music radio format. [3] The studio is on SW Bancroft Street, near downtown Portland. [4] The station transmitter is atop Portland's West Hills, off SW Fairmount Court. [5]
KFLY (101.5 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Corvallis, Oregon, that serves the Willamette Valley of west-central Oregon. It airs a country music format and is owned by Bicoastal Media. It carries the nationally syndicated Bobby Bones Show in morning drive time from Nashville.
Robert Chopping was president of the company and Harmon Springer was named the station's general manager. [8] In 1968, the station was airing 12 hours of country & western music each week in addition to its previous middle of the road music format. [9] By 1970, the format was an even split between country and MOR music. [10]