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WPWX (92.3 FM) is an urban contemporary radio station licensed to Hammond, Indiana and serving the Chicago metropolitan area in addition to Northwest Indiana, and is owned by Crawford Broadcasting.
KIPR (92.3 FM, "Power 92 Jams") is a commercial radio station carrying an urban contemporary format located in Little Rock, Arkansas and licensed to Pine Bluff. It is owned by Cumulus Media. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the transmitter tower is located in Jefferson, northwest of Pine Bluff.
This changed to "Power 98.3 & 96.1" on March 6, 2017, when the station began simulcasting on translator K241BQ (96.1 FM) in Fort McDowell and shut down K270BZ. [ 7 ] On September 1, 2023, KKFR began playing frequent Drake music, and rebranded as “Drake 98.3 & 96.1” to coincide with the It's All a Blur Tour with no other notable changes. [ 8 ]
WZPW (92.3 FM, "Z92.3") is a radio station in Central Illinois with a rhythmic top 40 music format, licensed to Peoria, Illinois and broadcasting with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 19,200 watts. The station is owned by Cumulus Media, which purchased the station from Townsquare Media. [2]
WHJA – Power 101.1 – Classic Hip Hop, Urban Oldies, Blues; WORV – WORV 1580 AM – Urban contemporary gospel; WJKX – 102JKX – Urban adult contemporary; WJMG – 92.1 WJMG – Urban contemporary; WZLD – Wild 106.3 – Mainstream urban; WGDQ - 93.1 WGDQ - Urban Gospel; WQID-LP - Hot 105.3 - Urban contemporary; WKZW HD-2 - 97.7 The ...
wage; waxa; wbft-lp; wcfi; wcfq-lp; wcnu; wddv; wdsp; weag; wekj-lp; wfab; wfbo-lp; wfdm; wfha-lp; wfjv-lp; wfla (boca raton, florida) wflp-lp; wflu-lp; wfsh; wfsx ...
KTAR-FM, 92.3 MHz at Glendale, Arizona, in the Phoenix area, formerly "Power 92" then "Power 92.3" with the callsign KKFR; KREV (FM), 92.7 MHz at Alameda, California in the San Francisco area, formerly known as "Power 92.7" with the callsign KBTB
In the late 1980s, KULA moved back to Top 40, becoming KXPW ("Power 92"), under long time Top 40 programmer Jay Stone. KXPW later re-branded to "92X", with initially Dean Stevens, and later, Brad Barrett as program director. In 1993, New-Tex Communications bought both KSSK and KXPW for $7.5 million, and changed KXPW's call letters to KSSK-FM. [10]