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WIMX

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For the radio station in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania at 99.3 FM known as WIMX from 1988-1995, see WHKF. Radio station in Gibsonburg, Ohio
WIMX
Broadcast areaToledo, Ohio
Frequency95.7 MHz
BrandingMix 95.7
Programming
FormatUrban adult contemporary
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Ownership
Owner
  • Urban Radio Broadcasting
  • (GCR Licenses, LLC)
Sister stationsWJZE
History
First air dateNovember 15, 1988 (as WRED)
Call sign meaningAnagram of "Mix"
Technical information
ClassA
ERP3,500 watts
HAAT132 meters (433 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitemix957.net

WIMX (95.7 FM) is an urban adult contemporary radio station licensed to Gibsonburg, Ohio, known as "Mix 95.7". The station's studios are located in downtown Toledo, and its transmitter is located west of Woodville, Ohio.

History

WRED

The station began broadcasting on Monday, January 23, 1989. The original owners were longtime Toledo radio personality Buddy Carr and his wife Carolyn.

95.7 began with an Adult Contemporary format with the call letters WRED . The station was known as Red 96. In July 1989, the format was changed to Oldies.

Sometime later, Oldies was dropped for a full-time simulcast of Toledo classic country music station WTOD 1560AM.

WIMX transmitter site and former studio building at 1201 Fremont Pike, Woodville, Ohio. The building at the right of the tower served as its studio location from its beginnings in 1988 to 1993.

Y95.7

In 1993, Booth American, who was the owner of WKKO K-100 at the time, Entered into local marketing agreement (LMA) with the owners of WRED. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) duopoly had recently relaxed rules to allow a broadcaster to control 2 FM stations in a single market. WRED's operations, now under Booth's control, moved to the same facility as WTOD and WKKO on Arlington Avenue in South Toledo. However, the antenna and transmitter facility (and a since-vacant studio building) remained in Woodville.

On August 30, 1993, the format was changed to Country, branded as "Young Country Y95.7", and changed call letters to WYHK. The LMA deal ended in 1995, and Booth America purchased the station outright.

Mix 95.7

On March 20, 1996, the format was changed to Urban Adult Contemporary as "MIX 95.7". The callsign changed to WIMX. WIMX was later purchased by Cumulus Broadcasting in 1997. However, they were forced to sell WIMX due to FCC ownership limits. The station was sold to Riverside Broadcasting. Riverside Broadcasting then sold WIMX to its current owner, Urban Radio Broadcasting in April 2003 .

External links

Radio stations in the Toledo, Ohio, metropolitan area
AM
FM
LPFM
Translators
Digital
NOAA
Call signs
Internet
Defunct
 U.S. radio stations in Northwest Ohio
Lima/Findlay
Vacationland
Toledo
Other nearby regions
Ann Arbor
Cleveland
Detroit
Mid-Ohio
 Canada
Southwestern Ontario
See also
List of radio stations in Ohio

Notes
1. Operating under a "Shared Time" agreement on the same frequency.
Urban Radio Broadcasting
Columbus/Starkville/West Point, MS
Toledo, OH

41°28′19″N 83°25′05″W / 41.472°N 83.418°W / 41.472; -83.418


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