WWGY

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WWGY
City of license Grove City, Pennsylvania
Broadcast area Grove City, Pennsylvania
Hermitage, Pennsylvania
Sharon, Pennsylvania
Youngstown, Ohio
Branding Froggy 95
Frequency 95.1 (MHz)
First air date September 10, 1962 (as WEDA-FM)
Format Country
Callsign meaning WW FrogGY
Owner Forever Broadcasting, LLC
Website http://www.froggy95pa.com

WWGY, branded as Froggy 95, is a country music formatted radio station in Grove City, Pennsylvania. It is not a simulcast affiliation with Froggy 100.3 in Meadville, Pennsylvania, but the two stations are owned by Forever Broadcasting, LLC. The station originates its programming from facilities it shares with WKST and WJST in New Castle, Pennsylvania.

WWGY is a station in the Pittsburgh Steelers radio network.

History

Beginnings as WEDA

WWGY first signed on the air on September 10, 1962 as WEDA-FM, under the ownership of WEDA, Inc. James V. Perry served as president and general manager. Studios were located at 125 S. Broad Street in Grove City. The station first broadcast at this frequency with a power output of 3,000 watts.

For much of its early history, the station broadcast a format of easy-listening and adult contemporary music until the early 1980s, when it adopted an urban contemporary format, but then reverted to adult contemporary music by 1986 when the station went through its first ownership change in December of that year. Western Pennsylvania Radio was a division of Beta Broadcasting, a corporation headed by Bruce Simel.

As WRKU

By the end of the 1980s, WEDA underwent a substantial change. It changed its format from adult contemporary to AOR and adopted the call letters WRKU, and the resulting position statement "K-Rock: We Will Rock You". The station was also granted a substantial transmitter power increase from 3,000 to 50,000 watts ERP, which also allowed it to relocate its studios and offices to the Churchill Square shopping center at 4531 Belmont Avenue in Youngstown, Ohio. Because there was no album rock station on the air in the Youngstown radio market at the time, WRKU became the de facto rock station in that city, while still retaining its community of license as Grove City.

As WICT

In November 1994, WRKU was sold for $1.4 million to Zapis Communications, which also acquired WHTX, a competing station licensed to Sharpsville, Pennsylvania and its sister, WRQQ in Farrell, Pennsylvania. The transaction occurred after FCC ownership rules were relaxed allowing owners the opportunity to acquire more than one FM and one AM in a single market.

The WRKU format and call letters were spun off to WHTX, so that 95.1 could adopt a country music format and the call letters WICT-FM, following the lead of stations in other markets switching to country after a surge in that format's popularity. WRQQ was rechristened WICT, making it a full-time simulcast of its new FM sister. The new WICT-AM/FM then became known as "Cat Country", slowly evolving into its existing format. WICT-FM, along with the newly rechristened WICT-AM and WRKU-FM, then moved its studios and offices to 4800 Belmont Avenue in Youngstown.

The station would make one final studio move during its time in Ohio, and that would be near Ohio Route 82 to 6874 Strimbu Drive SE in Brookfield, Ohio, after the station was acquired by GOCOM Communications in February 1998.

As WWGY

In February 2004, WICT was acquired by its current owner, Altoona, Pennsylvania-based Forever Broadcasting, for $2.28 million. Upon purchasing the station, Forever Broadcasting moved the station's studios and offices back to Pennsylvania, co-located them with new dual AM sister stations WBZY and WKST at 219 Savannah-Gardner Road in New Castle, where it remains today. WICT's call letters were then changed to WWGY, and like the majority of country stations under the Forever umbrella, took the "Froggy" brand, becoming what it is today as "Froggy 95".

External links

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