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WMXD station bus. WMXD (92.3 FM Mix 92.3) is a commercial radio station in Detroit, Michigan, owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The station operates with 45,000 watts of power from an antenna located on the Cadillac Tower building in downtown Detroit.
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
WCXI (1160 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Fenton, Michigan. The station broadcasts to Metro Detroit and the Flint area. It is owned by the Birach Broadcasting Corporation and it airs a Christian talk and teaching radio format. By day, WCXI is powered at 15,000 watts. It uses a directional antenna with a three-tower array.
It became WCHB-FM "The Beat", and later WDTJ "105.9 Jamz" (now urban AC-formatted WDMK "105.9 Kiss-FM"). FM 98 WJLB was known for its specialty Friday mix shows, with songs dating back to the 1980s, hosted by the DJ known as the "Electrifying Mojo." WJLB also featured a Saturday Night Hip-Hop Show "The Rap Blast."
Jock Fritz later bought the struggling 92.3 FM and converted it to the successful WMXD "Mix 92.3" (now an iHeartMedia station), and founded the Radio Station Representative Association in Detroit. WXYT continued with its talk format as "Talkradio 1270", airing local programs hosted by Denny McLain , Kevin Joyce, Bill Bonds , Mark Scott , David ...
the former call sign of WMXD (92.3 FM Mix 92.3), an urban adult contemporary radio station in Detroit, Michigan Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title WTWR .
Mix FM Townsville (106.3 FM), a defunct radio station in Townsville, now Star 106.3; ... WMXD (Mix 92.3) in Detroit, Michigan; WMXW (Mix 103.3) in Binghamton, New York;
WNIC (100.3 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to Dearborn, Michigan, and serving the Metro Detroit media market. Owned by iHeartMedia, WNIC broadcasts an adult contemporary radio format. Each year, usually on the first Friday of November, WNIC switches its format to all-Christmas music. [2]