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Ratings for The Fox remained low during its entire run and had little impact on WYCD. On April 29, 2009, WDTW-FM went jockless and soft-relaunched under the branding of "Detroit Fox Country 106-7." The station also began putting more focus on newer country music.
TSJ's owner Josh Guttman stated that he also planned for WDTW to pursue Spanish-language broadcast rights to local professional sports teams, as TSJ had successfully done in Ohio. [6] On July 21, 2017, WDTW activated a low-powered FM translator on 107.9 MHz in Detroit, W300DI. That year, the station also dropped the La Mega brand in favor of La ...
WDTW (AM), a radio station (1310 AM) licensed to Dearborn, Michigan, United States; WLLZ (FM), a radio station (106.7 FM) licensed to Detroit, Michigan, United States, which held the call sign WDTW-FM from 2002 to 2019; WLQB, a radio station (93.5 FM) licensed to Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina, which briefly held the call sign WDTW-FM in 2019
On November 5, 2012, Cox announced an agreement between him and WMMS owner iHeartMedia to host mornings at classic rock station WDTW-FM/Detroit. Cox hosted the Detroit show from WMMS through voice-tracking, but also said he would occasionally host both shows from WDTW-FM. [5] Cox was under contract with WDTW & WMMS through 2017.
93.9 FM: Mio: West Central Michigan Media Ministries: Religious WAWB-LP: 107.3 FM: West Branch: West Branch Seventh Day Adventist Broadcasting, Inc. Christian WAWL-LP: 103.5 FM: Grand Haven: Tri-Cities Broadcasting Foundation: Classic Rock News Sports WAWM: 98.9 FM: Petoskey: Educational Media Foundation: Contemporary Christian WAXT-LP: 98.9 FM ...
New York’s 106.7 LITE FM made its highly anticipated switch to 24/7 Christmas music on Friday, Nov. 22, broadcasting live from Radio City Music Hall.
On July 24, 2006, the call letters for 102.9 FM in Ann Arbor were temporarily changed to WFOR-FM, as Clear Channel moved the "WWWW" call letters to the 1310 AM facility in Detroit. One week later, on July 31, 102.9 switched to WWWW-FM, different in only the "-FM" suffix. On September 15, 2006, the WDTW call letters returned to 1310 AM.
WZNX calls itself The Fox, a reference to the X in its call letters, and the F in the call letters of its onetime sister-station, WZNF (95.3 FM) licensed out of Rantoul, Illinois. The Cromwell Radio Group bought the radio station in the mid-1990s, kept the call letters and the "Fox" identifier.