Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
WMUZ (1200 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Taylor, Michigan, and serving the Metro Detroit radio market. Owned by Crawford Broadcasting, the station has a Christian talk and teaching format. [4] Religious hosts heard on WMUZ include David Jeremiah, Joyce Meyer, Alistair Begg, Chuck Swindoll and Adrian Rogers.
WMUZ-FM broadcasts using HD Radio technology. Its HD-2 digital subchannel was formerly known as Z-2, which played "Christian Alternative Rock" music by day and "Holy Hip Hop" music at night. Z-2 was later discontinued. Currently, the HD2 subchannel is a simulcast of Urban Gospel sister station WCHB 1340 AM.
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S ... Battle Creek Community Radio: Christian WGPR: 107.5 FM: Detroit: WGPR, Inc. ... Worship music WPON:
WLQV (1500 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Detroit, Michigan.It is owned by the Salem Media Group and broadcasts a Christian talk and teaching radio format.It uses paid brokered programming where hosts buy time on the station and may seek donations to their ministries during their programs.
Crawford Broadcasting also owns three other religious stations in the Detroit radio market: 1200 WMUZ (AM), which also has a Christian talk and teaching format; 103.5 WMUZ-FM, which plays Contemporary Christian music and 1340/96.7 WCHB, which has an urban gospel format.
WDTW (1310 kHz, "La Z 1310 & 107.9") is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Dearborn, Michigan, United States, and serving the Detroit metropolitan area. Owned by Pedro Zamora, the station broadcasts a Spanish-language radio format branded as La Z 1310. It features Spanish-language contemporary hit radio, Latin pop, reggaeton and regional ...
It broadcasts an urban gospel radio format and is owned by Crawford Broadcasting. The station is a reporter to Billboard's Nielsen/BDS Gospel airplay panel. The radio studios and offices are shared with co-owned WMUZ, WMUZ-FM (which simulcasts WCHB on its second digital subchannel) and WRDT, on Radio Plaza in Ferndale, Michigan.
WDRQ returned to a mainstream Top 40 format at the beginning of 1980 and made a brief return to the top 10 that spring, but the big story in Detroit radio that year was the meteoric rise of album-rocker WLLZ. WDRQ's ratings once again began to drop, reaching an all-time low of a 1.4 share in the Winter 1982 Arbitron ratings.