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WSRW-FM (105.7 MHz "Star 105.7") is a commercial radio station in Grand Rapids, Michigan.It airs an adult contemporary radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia.The studios and offices are on Monroe Center Street in Downtown Grand Rapids. [2]
WAPL (105.7 FM) is a mainstream rock formatted radio station licensed to Appleton, Wisconsin, that serves the Green Bay and Appleton-Oshkosh areas. The station is owned by Woodward Communications, and has studios on College Avenue in Appleton, with transmitting facilities located near the WGBA Tower west of unincorporated Shirley in the Town of Glenmore in southeastern Brown County.
Although many liked the music variety played by "Channel Z", it was not competitive in the ratings with Grove City's alternative station, WWCD. On September 19, 2005, after a week of stunting again (this time with episodes of the TV series Cheers ), The Fox relaunched as WBWR, "The Brew @ 105.7".
The station's transmitter and studio were located on 610 West Garland Avenue in Spokane, and the station played popular music. [5] KTWD was Spokane's first FM-only commercial station, not co-owned with an AM station. It was also Spokane's first FM stereo station. Terry Denbrook served as the station's chief engineer and station manager.
WROR-FM (105.7 FM) – branded as 105.7 WROR – is a commercial classic hits radio station licensed to Framingham, Massachusetts.Owned by the Beasley Broadcast Group, the station serves Greater Boston and much of surrounding New England, including portions of the Portsmouth and Providence radio markets.
Drive 105 played its last song, "Say It Ain't So" by Weezer, prior to temporarily switching over to a simulcast of sister station KXXR, in anticipation of a format flip. The flip to the Soft AC / Oldies format with the moniker "Love 105" happened at 5:30 the next morning, with Sonny and Cher 's " I Got You Babe " as the new format's debut song.
WJZ-FM (105.7 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Catonsville, Maryland, and serving the Baltimore metropolitan area.The station is owned by Audacy, Inc. through licensee Audacy License, LLC, and it broadcasts a sports radio format.
KRNB was first launched at 6 a.m. on September 16, 1996, with an Urban Adult Contemporary format playing R&B music, hence the call sign. (Coincidentally, it is the western reflection of an R&B station in Philadelphia called WRNB.) [3] [4] At the time, its only other competitor for the rest of the decade was KRBV, which went off the air as an R&B station in 1998 due to a transmitter problem ...