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W260CB (99.9 FM, "The Detroit Praise Network") is a radio translator in Detroit, Michigan. Owned by Beasley Broadcast Group, it relays an urban gospel format broadcast by WDMK-HD2, which, along with the 99.9 FM signal of W260CB is also simulcast on W252BX 98.3 FM. The stations are collectively branded as The Detroit Praise Network.
The station's transmitter is on Greenfield Road south of 10 Mile Road in the Detroit suburb of Oak Park. [3] WDMK broadcasts using HD Radio technology. Its HD-2 digital subchannel carries an urban gospel format known as "The Detroit Praise Network." That subchannel feeds two FM translators: 98.3 W252BX and 99.9 W260CB in Detroit.
WDKL began life on November 6, 1960, as WBRB-FM, the FM counterpart of Mount Clemens AM station WBRB (1430 AM) and owned by Malrite Communications Group. [4] WBRB-FM was among the first stations to be directly built directly from the group-up by Malrite, which was originally a 50-50 partnership between Milton Maltz and Robert Wright; Wright divested his stake in the company by 1971.
WDEK - Praise 95.7 & 1170 - Urban Gospel; WJTB-HD2 - 105.1Worship and Word Network - Urban Gospel; WXBT – 100.1 The Beat – Mainstream Urban. WXBT HD-2 - Columbia's BIN 105.5 - Black-oriented news; WHXT/WSCZ – Hot 103.9/93.9 – Mainstream Urban; WLXC – Kiss 103.1 – Urban Adult Contemporary; WWDM – 101.3 The Big DM – Urban Adult ...
Detroit: iHM Licenses, LLC: Black-oriented news WDKL: 102.7 FM: ... West Michigan Community Help Network: R&B Oldies/Dance WUGN: 99.7 FM: Midland: Family Life ...
In return, W252BX and W228CJ were sold to Urban One, and dropped the K-Love programming for WPZR's former urban gospel format as "The Detroit Praise Network" (now fed from WDMK 105.9 HD2). The remaining translators, still owned by EMF, adopted the Air 1 format, now fed from WDKL-HD2. Subsequently, WMXD-HD2 switched to iHeartRadio's Throwback ...
Former TV flagship stations include WKBD-TV (1972–2004) and WMYD (2004–2008, sharing rights with WDIV-TV).. The Pistons flagship radio station was WJR-AM from 1969 through 1982.WWJ in late 1980s, WDFN in early 2000s WXYT-FM until the end of the 2013–14 season.
On June 10, 2019, Urban One announced that it would not renew its LMA with WGPR when it expired at the end of 2019. The same day, Beasley Broadcast Group announced that it would acquire WDMK and its Detroit Praise Network stations for $13.5 million. [7] [8] WGPR is once again run by a staff employed by the Masons.