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WLLZ (106.7 MHz, Detroit's Wheels) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Detroit, Michigan.It is owned by iHeartMedia and it broadcasts a classic rock radio format, focusing mostly on active rock titles from the 1980s and 1990s.
Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee [1] [2] Format [3]; KDTI: 90.3 FM: Rochester Hills: Educational Media Foundation: Contemporary Christian KTGG: 1540 AM: Okemos
WEEX - 1230 - Fox Sports Radio [54] WODE-FM - 99.9 - Classic rock; Allentown/Bethlehem. WCTO – 96.1 – Country [54] WLEV – 100.7 – Adult contemporary; WWYY - 107.1 - Country (simulcast of WCTO) [54] Erie. WQHZ – 102.3 – Classic rock; WRIE – 1260/96.3 – Infinity Sports Network; WXKC – 99.9 — Adult contemporary; WXKC-HD2 ...
WDKL began life on November 6, 1960, as WBRB-FM, the FM counterpart of Mount Clemens AM station WBRB (1430 AM) and owned by Malrite Communications Group. [4] WBRB-FM was among the first stations to be directly built directly from the group-up by Malrite, which was originally a 50-50 partnership between Milton Maltz and Robert Wright; Wright divested his stake in the company by 1971.
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.
The WWWW call letters were originally used for 106.7 FM (and later 1130 AM) in Detroit.Many Detroit-area radio listeners of the 1970s remember WWWW-FM as a rock station with a slightly progressive lean.
In May 2006, WRIF outlasted yet another rock station but with a twist. 106.7 "The Drive" switched to country (this time as "106.7 The Fox") just as it did back in 1980 when it was known as "W4". WRIF was 1 out of the 4 radio stations (along with WMXD, WMUZ and WJZZ) in the Barden, Michigan area that was used on Barden Cablevision's character ...
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.