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KBLQ-FM (92.9 FM, "Q92") is a radio station broadcasting an adult contemporary format. Licensed to Logan, Utah , United States, it serves the Logan area. The station is currently owned by Sun Valley Radio incorporated.
WMFQ is now the only station with a city-grade signal in the Metro Ocala area playing 'hit music'. Q92.9 broadcasts to the entire Ocala/Gainesville radio market. Logo until 2017. The station was previously heard on 104.9 WYGC, bringing it a decent signal to Gainesville as WMFQ's signal is unlistenable in some parts of the Gainesville area.
BobFM 96.9 & Q929 Building Signage 5000 McKnight Road Pittsburgh, Pa (February 2, 2023) As the ratings declined for soft AC stations, management decided a new mainstream adult contemporary sound was needed. The WLTJ identity disappeared the weekend of March 23, 2008, and the station was rebranded as Q92.9. Station executives said they wanted to ...
WDJQ (92.5 MHz, "Q92") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Alliance, Ohio, and serving the Canton metropolitan area. WDJQ broadcasts a Top 40/CHR radio format and is owned by the family company of Don Peterson, the former publisher of The Alliance Review newspaper. The Peterson Family also owns WDPN 1310 AM.
Forbes listed several opportunities for Ohioans fortunate enough to enter and win a travel break, free of charge. Here are nine contests, sweepstakes, and giveaways for free fall travel. 1. NYC to ...
Apex Broadcasting sold WECQ – along with sister stations WHWY, WWAV, and WZLB — to Community Broadcasters effective December 1, 2016, at a purchase price of $5.9 million. On December 22, 2020, Community Broadcasters sold the entire Fort Walton Beach cluster to JVC Broadcasting for almost $2.3 million, which later closed on February 1, 2021.
On August 4, 2016, at midnight, WYGC ended its simulcast of WOW FM with WXJZ by flipping to a talk format branded as "104.9 - The Talk of Gainesville". In 2017, WYGC flipped to a simulcast of WMFQ "Q92.9" in Ocala after a long period of dead air. In March 2018, the station flipped to a 1980s-focused classic hits format branded as Y105.
Radio contests are principally sponsored by amateur radio societies, radio clubs, or radio enthusiast magazines. These organizations publish the rules for the event, collect the operational logs from all stations that operate in the event, cross-check the logs to generate a score for each station, and then publish the results in a magazine, in a society journal, or on a web site.