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The following radio stations broadcast on FM frequency 102.9 MHz: ... Kelantan FM in Kota Bharu, Kelantan ... WMSI-FM in Jackson, Mississippi; WMUU-LP in Madison, ...
Classical (MPB Classical HD Radio) WMAH-FM: 90.3 FM: Biloxi: Mississippi Authority For Educational TV: Classical (MPB Classical HD Radio) WMAO-FM: 90.9 FM: Greenwood: Mississippi Authority For Educational TV: Classical (MPB Classical HD Radio) WMAU-FM: 88.9 FM: Bude: Mississippi Authority For Educational TV: Classical (MPB Classical HD Radio ...
The station was granted the WWMR calls on September 5, 2006. [3] On August 27, 2008, WWMR signed on the air with a talk format as part of the Supertalk Mississippi talk radio network. [ 4 ] On September 3, 2016, WWMR changed its format from talk to country, branded as "Outlaw 102.9".
WMSI-FM (102.9 MHz, "Miss 103") is a radio station in Jackson, Mississippi, and owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. (formerly Clear Channel Communications until September 2014). WMSI's signal covers a roughly 90 mile radius around the city with an ERP of 100,000 watts. It is Mississippi's primary entry point for the Emergency Alert System.
KEZS-FM (102.9 MHz, "K103") is a country music-formatted radio station broadcasting from Cape Girardeau, Missouri, reaching portions of southern Illinois, Southeast Missouri, northeast Arkansas, the Missouri Bootheel, Western Kentucky, and the northern portion of West Tennessee.
The station launched on March 29, 1963, under the call sign KHOZ-FM. Throughout much of the 1970s and 1980s, the station ran an adult contemporary music format. In 1989, the station upgraded its format to contemporary hit radio under the call sign KWNQ and branding "WINK FM". Unfortunately, it was short-lived, and in Spring 1990, the station ...
WMKC (102.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Indian River, Michigan. It airs a country music format called Big Country 102.9. The station is owned by Black Diamond Broadcast Holdings, LLC.
[1] [4] [5] On January 2, 2012, the station adopted a regional Mexican format branded "102.9 Mex Mix". [6] [7] During a severe thunderstorm in mid-November, 2020, WMKB broadcast "dead air", that is, no audio was heard, likely related to the storm. The station remained in that state until April 1, 2021, when the transmitter went off the air.