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WKVK (106.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Contemporary Christian format. Licensed to Semora, North Carolina, it serves a large swath of central North Carolina and Southside Virginia as an outlet of K-LOVE. The station is currently owned by Educational Media Foundation.
The 106.7 frequency went to Carolina Christian Radio, owners of WMYT. [6] On January 1, 2011, the callsign changed to WMYT. [1] Late in 2012, WMYT's owners announced plans to sell 106.7 The Word and move the teaching programming to WZDG. [7] On July 22, 2013, WMYT became a conservative talk station, My Talker Radio, under LMA by Talk Media TV LLC.
WFGW (106.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Contemporary Christian music format to Knoxville, Tennessee and the surrounding area. It is a sister station and semi-satellite of WMIT in Black Mountain, North Carolina.
Radio One of North Carolina, LLC: Urban contemporary WFNZ-FM: 92.7 FM: Harrisburg: Radio One of North Carolina, LLC: Sports (ISN) WFOZ-LP: 105.1 FM: Winston-Salem: Forsyth Technical Community College: Variety WFQS: 91.3 FM: Franklin: Western North Carolina Public Radio: Classical music/news/talk WFSC: 1050 AM: Franklin: Sutton Radiocasting ...
In the North Carolina High Country, WMIT is simulcast on low-powered W234CF (94.7 MHz) in Boone, North Carolina. Most of WMIT's schedule is also simulcast on 106.7 WFGW in the Knoxville, Tennessee radio market. In 2007, WMIT began broadcasting in the HD Radio format, adding "theEdge 106.9" on the HD2 digital subchannel.
WGHJ (105.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Christian radio format. Licensed to Fair Bluff, North Carolina, United States, and serving the Whiteville, North Carolina area, the station is owned by Augusta Radio Fellowship Institute. [2] [3]
WWIL-FM (Life 90.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a contemporary Christian music format. Licensed to Wilmington, North Carolina, United States, the station serves the Wilmington, Jacksonville and North Myrtle Beach areas. The station is owned by Carolina Christian Radio, Inc, a 501c3 organization.
That required a change in its call sign, becoming WRNC, which stood for Raleigh, North Carolina. As WRNC, the station played Top 40 hits and then country music. In the 1960s the station was sold to Smiles Associates and in 1974 the format was changed to Christian radio. In 1978, the call sign was changed from WRNC to WPJL ("We Proclaim Jesus ...