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WQOK (97.5 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Carrboro, North Carolina, and serving the Raleigh–Durham radio market.WQOK is owned and operated by Urban One and airs a hip hop-leaning urban contemporary radio format.
WOKQ (97.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. The station serves the Merrimack Valley , the New Hampshire Seacoast , and York County, Maine , including the cities of Manchester and Portsmouth .
Main menu. Main menu. move to sidebar hide. Navigation Main page; Contents; Current events; ... Cincinnati. WFTK – 96.5 – Active rock [32] WGRR – 103.5 ...
WJVS Cincinnati (surrendered in 2012) WKJH-LP Bryan (cancelled in 2023) WLBJ-LP Fostoria (2015–2020) WLMH Morrow (cancelled in 2012) WLQR Toledo (1954–2016) WMH Cincinnati (1921–1923) WMVO Mount Vernon (1953–2023) WNSD Cincinnati (1972–1978) WHBD/WPAY Bellefontaine; moved to Mt. Orab in 1929 and Portsmouth in 1935 (1925–2011) WWGH-LP
WVNU (97.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting an adult contemporary format. Started in 1994 by Pat and Elaine Hays and licensed to Greenfield, Ohio, United States.The station is currently owned by Total Media Group Inc and features programming from CBS News Radio, Westwood One and Brownfield Ag Networks.
In 2009, Ohio State announced it had sold its athletic program's media rights to IMG College and RadiOhio, Inc. (member of the Dispatch Broadcasting Group and then-owner of longtime network flagships WBNS and WBNS-FM); the "lucrative multiyear deal" was reportedly worth $110 million, and scheduled to last through 2019.
One of the towers in the Merrimack array is a diamond-shaped "Blaw-Knox", a smaller version of the famous Blaw Knox tower of WLW in Cincinnati. Programming is also heard on FM translator station W260CF at 99.9 MHz. [3] The FM transmitter is on Mount Uncanoonuc in Goffstown. WFEA is simulcast on the HD2 digital subchannel of WMLL. Until February ...
An entirely fictional "WPIG" radio station made several appearances on the CBS sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati, where it was the hated cross-town rival of the eponymous station. The punchline was that the air staff at WPIG Cincinnati was "a bunch of swine." This usage predates the current WPIG's usage of the call sign.