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On Christmas Day 2020, the Hank classic country format moved from WLXO to then-WWRW (105.5 FM), which unlike the 96.1 facility covers the entire Lexington market, with a simulcast continuing for the time being on 96.1. [5] The WLXO call sign moved to 105.5 on June 14, 2021; 96.1 then changed from WWRW to WZNN on August 16, 2021.
WLXO (105.5 FM, "105.5 Hank FM") is a radio station with a classic country format. Licensed to Mount Sterling, Kentucky, United States, the station serves the Lexington-Fayette metro area. The station is currently owned by Clarity Communications, Inc. [2]
Credo Fitch Harris (1937). Microphone Memoirs of the Horse and Buggy Days of Radio.Bobbs-Merrill Company. (About WHAS and early radio in general)
Lexington's daily circulating newspaper is the ... KET KY 46.4 WKLE-DT4 PBS Kids: 56.1 ... WLXO (Classic Country) - 105.5 FM "105.5 Hank FM" WNJK (Variety ...
Later on, the AM went country and the FM became adult contemporary. With the FM rule changes in the 1990s, the Engles were able to find a way to up power to 25 kilowatts by moving to 96.1 on the dial, where they put the top country format, while turning the AM station to southern gospel.
WSTO (96.1 FM, "Hot 96") is a radio station that serves the Evansville, Indiana, Owensboro, Kentucky, and Henderson, Kentucky markets with a contemporary hit radio format. It is licensed to Owensboro and broadcasts from a 1,000-foot tower located midway between these cities in the Kentucky town of Hebbardsville.
In 2015, WVLK signed on an FM translator station, W266AN in Lawrenceburg, at 101.1 MHz. [6] On June 20, W266AN was forced off the air due to interference with WSGS in the Central Kentucky area. Effective June 13, 2017, the translator was licensed to Lexington at 97.3 FM, as W247CT. On January 1, 2020, WVLK began simulcasting on WCYN-FM 102.3 ...
WGKS (96.9 FM) is a commercial radio station broadcasting a classic hits radio format and calling itself "KISS 96-9". Licensed to Paris, Kentucky, United States, the station serves the Lexington-Fayette media market. It is owned by L.M. Communications, Inc. [2] Studios and offices are located at Triangle Center on West Main Street in Lexington. [3]