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Hot Adult Contemporary radio station in Horse Cave, Kentucky From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WOVO (106.3 FM) is a radio station stunting with a Christmas music format. Licensed to Horse Cave, Kentucky, United States, the station serves the Bowling Green area. The station is currently owned by the Commonwealth Broadcasting Corporation through licensee Soky Radio, LLC.[2]
Broadcast area | Bowling Green, Kentucky |
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Frequency | 106.3 MHz |
Branding | North Pole Radio |
Programming | |
Format | Stunting (Christmas music) |
Subchannels | HD2: Classic hip hop "95.9 The Vibe" HD3: Classical "Classical 97.5" |
Ownership | |
Owner |
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WWKU, WKLX/WKYY, WPTQ | |
History | |
First air date | July 14, 1972 (at 105.5) |
Former call signs |
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Former frequencies |
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Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 48702 |
Class | C2 |
ERP | 50,000 watts |
HAAT | 123 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 37°02′39.2″N 86°10′59.9″W |
Translator(s) | 99.7 W247DM (Glasgow) HD2: 95.9 W240CP (Bowling Green) HD3: 97.5 W248CF (Bowling Green) |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | wovo1063.com |
The station's studios, shared with Brownsville–licensed WKLX and Glasgow–licensed WPTQ, are located on McIntosh Street near US 231 on the south side of Bowling Green. WOVO's transmitter is located on Pine Knob along U.S. Route 68 (US 68) near Smiths Grove, Kentucky, sharing tower space with NBC/CBS/MeTV dual affiliate WNKY (channel 40) and Ion Television affiliate WNKY-LD (channel 35).
The station originally signed on the air on July 14, 1972.[3] The station was originally a class A station located at 105.5 FM, owned by John Barrick alongside AM station WCDS (1440 AM, now WWKU; unrelated to the current WCDS). WOVO inherited a variety format from WCDS, which switched exclusively to country music upon WOVO's inception.[4]
In 1990, WOVO and WCDS were sold to Ward Communications. After a few months off the air due to strong winds toppling the transmission tower in 1991, the station had instituted three changes: the station changed frequencies to 105.3 FM to obtain a power increase, changed its call sign to WWWQ on March 1, and adopted a new contemporary hit radio format upon returning to the air on July 9, 1991[4][5] following a tornado that affected the station's broadcasting facility that spring. On September 23, 1996, the station reversed their 1991 change of callsign and rechristened itself as WOVO.[6]
In 1997, the station, along with WHHT, WXPC (now WPTQ), and WCDS, along with four other stations in Kentucky, were acquired by a new business venture named Commonwealth Broadcasting Corporation, formed by Steve Newberry and former Kentucky governor Brereton C. Jones.[7] WOVO programming was simulcast over WCDS from its 1998 return to the air until it became a sports radio station in 2002.
In October 2012, Commonwealth Broadcasting instituted a major three-way frequency and FCC license change. WHHT upgraded its signal in a move to 106.3 MHz, which would be traded to WOVO, which moved its adult contemporary format from classic rock-formatted WPTQ's previous 105.3 FM frequency. WHHT's country music format was relocated to the 103.7 FM frequency, which that station previously broadcast on from 1991 through 1998.[8]
On November 18, 2024, WOVO dropped its hot adult contemporary format and began stunting with Christmas music, branded as "North Pole Radio".[9]
The station's HD radio signal is multiplexed in this manner.
Freqnency (MHz-subchannel) |
Callsign | Programming |
---|---|---|
106.3FM 106.3-1 HD |
WOVO WOVO-HD1 |
Simulcast of the traditional FM signal "WOVO 106.3" / Stunting (Christmas music) |
106.3-2 HD | WOVO-HD2 | W240CP / "95.9 The Vibe" Classic hip hop |
106.3-3 HD | WOVO-HD3 | W248CF / "Classical 97.5" Classical |
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