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WHLW (104.3 FM) is a radio station licensed to serve Luverne, Alabama, United States.The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and licensed to iHM Licenses, LLC, and is one-third of the all-urban Montgomery cluster, complementing urban AC's WWMG and mainstream urban's WZHT.
WOAD – Gospel 1300 AM & 103.5 FM - Urban contemporary gospel; WJSU-FM – FM 88 – Jazz. WJSU-HD2 - JSU Tigers The Sipp - Urban Alternative; WMPR – WMPR 90.1 FM - Urban contemporary, Blues, Urban Gospel, Variety; WHLH – 95.5 Hallelujah FM – Urban contemporary gospel; WRBJ-FM – 97.7 FM – Urban contemporary; WJMI – 99 Jams ...
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee [1] [2] Format KGDH-LP: 104.5 FM: Mobile: Mobile Hispanic Education Family Fundation: Spanish religious KRLE: 89.7 FM
In 2004, it changed its call letters to KPHW and adopted the "Power 104.3" handle to reflect its current position and focus on R&B/hip-hop product, but by 2010, it began moving more towards rhythmic pop tracks, which became more noticeable after the recent departures of top 40/CHR rival KQMQ and longtime Rhythmic rival KIKI, the latter returning as KHJZ.
WZHT (105.7 FM) is a mainstream urban formatted radio station that is licensed to Troy, Alabama, that serves the Montgomery area. It is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc., and is one-third of the all-urban Montgomery cluster, complementing urban AC's WWMG and urban gospel's WHLW.
This page was last edited on 20 February 2025, at 03:38 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
91.9 FM: Clarksville: Austin Peay State University: College WASL: 100.1 FM: Dyersburg: Dr Pepper Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Dyersburg, LLC: Adult hits WATO: 106.1 FM: Oliver Springs: Loud Media LLC: Alternative rock WAUO: 90.7 FM: Hohenwald: American Family Association: Religious talk WAUV: 89.7 FM: Ripley: American Family Association ...
WFXC signed on in 1965 as WSRC-FM, the sister station of Durham's WSRC (1410 AM, now WRJD). In 1971, Duke University Broadcasting Service bought the station and renamed it WDBS. The new station was free-form with much progressive rock, folk, jazz and a daily classical music program. On the business side, WDBS operated as a non-profit commercial ...