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Station operations manager and morning show host Greg Bolyard is the owner of WKMM Radio, LLC. [6] [7] [8] The sale price of the station will be $70,000. [7] Studios are located on Main Street in Kingwood with their transmitter along West Virginia Route 7 near Terra Alta, West Virginia. [9]
WFSP-FM is an oldies formatted broadcast radio station. [3] The station is licensed to Kingwood, West Virginia and serves Kingwood and Morgantown in West Virginia and Oakland in Maryland. [1] [2] WFSP-FM is owned by David Wills and operated under their WFSP Radio, LLC. licensee. [1]
Studios of WFSP-AM/FM, located along West Virginia Route 7 outside of Kingwood. On June 6, 2013, WFSP and sister station WFSP-FM were sold to Kingwood-based WFSP Radio, LLC for $500,000. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] The sale was closed on September 30, 2013.
West Virginia Radio Corporation of Elkins: Country WDNE-FM: 98.9 FM: Elkins: West Virginia Radio Corporation of Elkins: Country WDTF-LP: 107.9 FM: Berkeley Springs: Defenders of the Faith, Inc. Catholic Religious WDUQ-LP: 99.1 FM: Benwood: Kol Ami Havurah: Classic Jazz/Blues WDYK: 100.5 FM: Ridgeley: West Virginia Radio Corporation of the ...
WUKL is a Christian adult contemporary-formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Masontown, Pennsylvania, [2] serving Uniontown, Pennsylvania, Morgantown, West Virginia, and Kingwood, West Virginia. WUKL is owned and operated by Educational Media Foundation, broadcasting EMF's K-LOVE format.
WKTQ is a Country formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Oakland, Maryland. Due to the high altitude of its tower, WKTQ's signal covers most of Garrett County, Maryland, most of neighboring Preston County, West Virginia, and parts of Tucker, Grant, and Mineral Counties in West Virginia. WKTQ is owned and operated by Robert and Ashley ...
WKMZ (103.3 MHz) is a news/talk/sports formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Salem, West Virginia, serving Clarksburg and Weston in West Virginia. [1] WKMZ is owned and operated by WVRC Media. [5] Former logo
In 1975, West Virginia Wesleyan College agreed to sell the station to the new West Virginia Public Radio Network, and its call sign was changed to WVPW. In 1999, WVWC went to a 24-hour format for the first time in the station's history. The station used voice tracking and an automated system to stay on the air. Summer 2000 was the first summer ...