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Transmitter Site: 36° 48' 10" N 76° 16' 58" W Network Affiliation: FamilyNet 21-1 TBN (480i) RDS: No Owner: Liberty University AVS Forum - HDTV/Cable/Satellite Forums Frequency Background: Network Affiliation: FamilyNet Tweaked the format in 2007 for less 60s music and went in a Classic Hits direction. Best heard on the Southside of Hampton Roads. Was known as "102.5 The Shark - Good Times & Killer Oldies" until late September 2005 playing 60s-80s Hits and Beach music; tweaking their format along with sister "Mix 96" WKJX/96.7. This station was bought in early 1990 by Rick Loesch and his sister. On July 4, 1992 with WERX operating for two years with a hard-to-pick-up 3,000-watt signal, went big time. jus.yesmeen.ca From a new 700-foot tower in Tyrrell County NC, the station cranked up 50,000 watts of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Led Zeppelin, Grateful Dead, Allman Brothers, Metallica, Doors, Red Hot Chili Peppers and more with the 'Rock 102.5' moniker. In late 1996 they flipped to oldies using 'The Shark'. Is now owned by East Carolina Radio. 3/19/2002 - WWHV: Urban "Hot 102.1" 27:33 (Windows Media) Owner: Word Broadcasting Network 3/17/1995 Started broadcasting the DTV transition "nightlight" loop at 6 p.m. on 6/12/2009 for 30 days. Dropped UPN27 for CW27 in late August 2006. On January 24, 2006, UPN and The WB networks announced they would merge into a newly combined network called The CW; the letters representing the first initial of its corporate parents CBS and the Warner Brothers unit of Time Warner. Since WGNT/27 was owned by CBS, it immediately got the CW affiliation in Hampton Roads. The CW launched September 20, 2006. Was owned by Viacom until it and the CBS Network (among other properties) were split into two different intenties in late 2005. What began as one of the first UHF television stations in the country has turned into a broadcasting powerhouse. UPN 27, WGNT-TV is part of the Viacom Television Stations Group (formerly Paramount Stations Group until merged with CBS when Viacom bought CBS) and currently reigns as one of the highest rated stations of its kind - but it wasn't always that way. Radio station WLOV put Norfolk's third (second UHF) station on the air on December 6, 1953. After a program where they introduced their personnel (mostly WTOV personnel) (the morning guy at WCMS was one of the employees), the first network broadcast was the Du Mont telecast of the New York Giants and the Cleveland Browns. Their signature show was Captain Video. The studio was located at 539 West 21st Street in downtown Norfolk, with the transmitter site on Spratley Street in Portsmouth. It later moved to another location in downtown Norfolk rdpbhio.simongosselin.fr (that housed a Maaco dealership until recently) that became the Norfolk home of WVEC. The original WTOV lasted only about 18 months. WTOV #2 was operated by West Virginia used car dealer Tim Brite, who showed westerns and syndicated country music shows (maybe "CMT") from a tiny building at the transmitter site in Portsmouth. He also went dark around 1958. Pat Robertson bought what was left of the dilapidated, vandalized roofless building and started WYAH. On his business cards for the Christian Broadcasting Network was WTOV original logo with the new WYAH call letters. He had one camera. As the years went on, of course, he expanded the building, added a second floor for his radio station and two studios in the back. Jim and Tammy Bakker had a two-story, three-sided house in Studio B for their kids' chow. Robertson moved CBN to Virginia Beach. WYAH showed mostly religious programming over the years until the station was sold to Centennial Communications Inc (Ray Bottom for $8 million) and began showing more general entertainment programming. Bottom held on for several years then sold WGNT to Paramount Stations Group for $45 million. Paramount gutted the building, installed all new computer systems and redesigned the look of the interior. An elevator lfgsuxn.scuolasancasciano.it was installed for the first time, and the equipment slowly replaced. On January 16th, 1995 the station became a charter member of the United Paramount Network, blasting off jbtmg.techgarage.my with the premiere of Star Trek: Voyager. On October 31st, 1997 WGNT completed its transition to the station that exists today when it was acquired by Viacom, Inc and became a part of the Paramount Stations Group (now Viacom Television Stations Group). WMRTV - Western Maryland Media PTY (Program Type): ? PTY (Program Type): Classical 36° 50' 52.5" N 75° 59' 11.7" W — I-264 & Parks Ave Domestic Station Class: B HD1 - Format: Modern Adult Contemporary Format: Adult Album Alternative/Public Radio Energy 98 - Dance Hits - Net only 12/6/2004 - WVXX-AM: Sports "FOX Sports Radio 1050" - Call letter change (TOTH ID) :10 (.WMA) 2.1 UNC-HD (1080i) On-Air Positioning: Domestic Station Class: D Owner: Max Media FCC Facility ID: 71286 VA's Eastern Shore and NE North Carolina (south). Usually one of the top rated stations in NE North Carolina. Well received in the southern parts of Hampton Roads. Periodically shows up in the Hampton Roads Arbitron ratings. Sister to stations WCNC, WZBO, WOBX, WOBR-FM, WKJX, WOBX-FM and WERX-FM. Campbell Broadcasting out of Wilson NC signed-on 105.7 in 1981-82 as WWOK. WRSF was bought by Jones Eastern of the Outer Banks headed by C. J. Jones from Cambell in the mid-80s. WRSF went through a brief call change to WWOK from 4/9/87 to 6/24/87 but quickly changed back to WRSF. In the late 80s and early 90s were known as "Surf106" with a Top 40 format. On-Air Positioning: Williamsburg's Golden Memories Station On-Air Positioning: Positive & Alternative, Air 1 Website: xl103.com WRIC-TV Petersburg VA - Fall 2003. Newscast intro... PTY (Program Type): TOP 40 On-Air Positioning: NewsChannel 3 49-2 qubo (480i) Web/Social Media Management/Development ~ Producer ~ Internet Content Creator Website: newsradio560.com Service Designation: FX – Translator Station (retransmits signal, different channel than main station) / Class D FCC Facility ID: 126617 PS (Program Service - Dynamic) TITLE + ARTIST Changed call letters from WYRM to WKQA on 1/31/2014. Dropped "Where You Really Matter" for "Ministry Radio" on 4/1/2005. Previous calls ntkc.scuolasancasciano.it of WCKO were dumped on 8/30/04 for WYRM. On July 28, 2003, Word closed on the purchase of WCKO/1110 from Metropolitan Broadcasting Co. Following the August 2000 death of Metropolitan Radio Group founder Gary Acker, the owners started to sell off some of their stations. They got $1.25M for two black gospel AMs that billed themselves as “The Power Company.” The first was AM1110 here in Hampton Roads and he other one was WOBS Jacksonville FL. Metropolitan had a LMA with FreeFall Communications to operate the station. It's format was Black Gospel Talk mixed with gospel music. The station is now operated by Word Management, the operations/management company associated with Word Broadcasting. The station went dark on July 23, 2003 after the local management agreement with FreeFall expired. Word ltouq.techgarage.my remodeled the transmitter building and replaced the old transmitter and installed a new backup one. The on-air date was originally set for October 1, 2003. It ended up being mid-June 2004. The original format for the 1110 frequency was country-rock with the calls of WZAM when the Benns family signed it on. Featured a lot of Eagles, Marshall Tucker, Lynyrd Skynyrd and other Southern Rock mixed in with ‘outlaw’ style country. Sounded great but didn’t work. This was abandoned for album rock shortly thereafter. Used to be an oldies station and then, before that, religious WZAM. And before that it featured a modern rock format and was co-owned with 93.7 FM, WMYK. They simulcast with "K94" WMYK-FM quite a bit back in the album rock days as "Zam11" with a lot of Southern curmayp.simongosselin.fr Rock (Lynyrd Skynyrd, Outlaws, etc.). Since 1976. Frequency Background: RDS: No "Sitelerimizde reklam ve pazarlama faaliyetlerinin yürütülmesi amaçları ile çerezler kullanılmaktadır. 162.425 WWH26 Mamie NC