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WBTJ (106.5 FM) – branded as 106.5 The Beat – is a commercial urban contemporary radio station licensed to serve Richmond, Virginia.Owned by Audacy, Inc., the station services the Greater Richmond Region and the Petersburg area.
KQMV (92.5 FM, "Movin' 92-5") is a commercial radio station licensed to Bellevue, Washington, and serving the Seattle-Tacoma-Puget Sound radio market.The Hubbard Broadcasting, Inc. outlet airs a contemporary hit radio radio format.
KQXL-FM (106.5 MHz, "Q106.5") is an urban adult contemporary music formatted radio station serving the Baton Rouge, Louisiana, area.The Cumulus Media station operates with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 50 kW and is licensed to New Roads, Louisiana.
KWPZ (106.5 FM) is a commercial radio station broadcasting a Christian adult contemporary radio format, with an emphasis on praise and worship music.Some Christian talk and teaching shows are also heard and some programming is shared with sister station 105.3 KCMS in Seattle.
WDAF-FM (106.5 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Liberty, Missouri, and serving the Kansas City metropolitan area.Owned by Audacy, Inc., the station airs a country music radio format, branded as "106.5 The Wolf".
KISS-FM is the brand name of a Top 40 music format heard on FM radio stations in many cities in the United States and overseas. iHeartMedia claims ownership of the KISS-FM brand in the United States and operates most KISS-FM formatted stations there, though not KISS-FM in San Antonio, Texas, or KISS-FM America on TuneIn.
106.5 FM signed on June 30, 1960 [1] as WCBM-FM, a sister station to WCBM (680 AM). In 1968, Metromedia, which had bought the WCBM stations in 1964, sold WCBM-FM to The A.S. Abell Company, owner of WMAR-TV and the Sunpapers, for $200,000; the sale was necessary because Metromedia's purchase of WASH in Washington put the company over the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s ownership ...
Jeff Miller (ed.). "History of Broadcasting in West Virginia" – via Tripod.com. Images. Radio listener in Westover, West Virginia, 1938.