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|---|---|
| Broadcast area | |
| Frequency | 101.9MHz (HD Radio) |
| Branding | 102 JAMZ |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Format | Classic hip-hop |
| Subchannels |
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| Ownership | |
| Owner |
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| History | |
First air date | November 1, 1967 (58 years ago) (1967-11-01) |
Former call signs |
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Call sign meaning | "Jam" |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 73137 |
| Class | C |
| ERP | 92,000 watts |
| HAAT | 483 meters (1,585 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 28°55′11″N81°19′7.2″W / 28.91972°N 81.318667°W /28.91972; -81.318667 |
| Translators | 93.3 W227CP (Sanford, relays HD3) 97.7 W249EH (Daytona Beach, relays HD3) 106.3 W292DZ (Orlando, relays HD3) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast |
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| Website | |
WJHM (101.9FM) is a radio station licensed toDaytona Beach, Florida serving theOrlando andSpace Coast areas ofCentral Florida. Owned byAudacy, Inc., it broadcasts aclassic hip-hop format branded as "102 JAMZ". Its studios are located inMaitland and the transmitter is inOrange City.
The 101.9 frequency began as WMFJ-FM on November 1, 1967. The FM sister toAM 1450 in Daytona Beach, WMFJ-FM was an automatedbeautiful music station known asStereo 102.[2] The station's calls were changed to WQXQ in 1973, and the format became automatedalbum oriented rock asQ102.[3] Despite the rock format's success, management felt that aTop 40 hit station would have more mass appeal, and soQ102 changed from rock to Top 40 in 1976; initially the station remained automated, but by the end of the 1970s it employed a staff of live and local announcers. The station changed its calls to WDOQ in 1980, but the format remained top 40, the moniker remainedQ102, and the ratings remained high. Due to new competition in the Daytona market fromWNFI in 1982,Q102 began to more aggressively target the Orlando market as opposed to only Daytona Beach. Although plans for a big 100,000-watt signal that would have extended to St. Augustine, Gainesville and Ocala were scrapped, WDOQ's listenership continued to grow.[4]
In 1984, WDOQ was sold and adopted the new calls WCFI, with a satellite-fedadult contemporary format from Transtar (nowDial Global), using theI-4 (a tribute to Miami's WINZ-FM) and laterSunny 102 monikers.[5] In 1985, the station was purchased by Duffy Broadcasting for $7.7 million. On June 16, 1986, the format andcalls changed again to WORZ,Z-102FM, aclassic rock station.[6] In 1987, it was sold to Beasley-Reed Broadcasting for $9.2 million.[7]
On April 1, 1988, the call letters were changed to WJHM, and the station adopted aCHR/urban format as102 Jamz under the direction of Program Director Duff Lindsey and consultant Jerry Clifton. The first song on "102 Jamz" was "Jam on It" byNewcleus.[8] The station was an immediate success with listeners, and within two years, ascended to the top of the Orlando ratings. Some DJs during this time included Joe Nasty doing mornings, Magic Scott (now Cadillac Jack in Philadelphia) doing afternoons, and Cedric Hollywood as mid-day jock and music director. WJHM was purchased byChancellor Media in 1997. In late 1998, Hollywood left for a position atWEDR inMiami. Soon after, WJHM began shifting towards an urban-oriented direction. Although the station was labeled as "Rhythmic", WJHM remained an urban station at its core, and would shift to urban altogether around the same timeWCFB evolved tourban AC in the late 1990s.
The late 1990s brought a time of mergers with Chancellor merging with Evergreen and forming AMFM, Inc., who held ownership of WJHM until it merged withClear Channel in 2000. To comply with FCC ownership rules, Clear Channel sold WJHM toInfinity Broadcasting (laterCBS Radio) in 2001. For a brief time in 2005, WJHM reverted to rhythmic to go up against rhythmic-formattedWPYO, though WJHM would revert to urban a short time later. Although it was one of the top ranking radio stations in the market, WJHM would later fall in the ratings behind WPYO, whose Rhythmic direction slightly favored hip hop but whose playlist was almost identical to WJHM.

In the fall of 2011, WJHM began a transition to a more pop-oriented rhythmic Top 40 direction in order to better compete withWXXL, the market's only Top 40/CHR and former sister station; the shift would be completed by the following February. In late January 2012, WJHM droppedRickey Smiley's syndicated morning show in favor of a more music-intensive morning block,[9] let go airstaffer Jay Love after 18 years,[10] and added songs from artists likeJessie J,Avicii,Kelly Clarkson,fun.,The Wanted, andAdele. In addition, the station's longtime "Non-Stop Hip-Hop and R&B" slogan was dropped, replacing it with "102 Minutes of Commercial-Free Music". Along with these changes, WJHM dropped theSunday morning gospel programming syndicated from WVEE, although WJHM's HD2 subchannel broadcast a Gospel format full-time.

During the early morning hours of February 11, 2014, WJHM dropped the "Jamz" branding after 26 years and beganstunting with a loop of the song "Get Lucky" byDaft Punk. At 10:19 that morning, WJHM rebranded as101.9 AMP Radio and shifted to Top 40/CHR altogether, putting it in line with CBS Radio's "AMP Radio" branding, which favors rhythmic pop and dance hits. The first song on "AMP Radio" was "Timber" byPitbull featuringKesha.[11][12] Despite the rebranding, WJHM continued to lag in the Arbitron ratings behind CHR competitorWXXL and then-rhythmic CHR stationWPYO.[13]
On January 20, 2016, WJHM changed its call letters to WQMP to match the "AMP Radio" branding.
On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge withEntercom.[14] The merger was approved on November 9, and was consummated on November 17.[15][16]

On November 29, 2017, at 3 pm, after playing "End Game" byTaylor Swift, WQMP flipped toalternative rock asAlt 101.9, joining several other former "AMP Radio"-branded stations in switching to the format and brand after the completion of the Entercom merger. The change brought the format back to a full-market signal in Orlando for the first time since 2008, when sister stationWOCL flipped toclassic hits. The first song on Alt was "Smells Like Teen Spirit" byNirvana. The most recent analog broadcast station to air the format full-time,Cox Media'sW297BB/WCFB-HD2, was aired on atranslator and anHD sub-channel, and aired from June 2014 to January 2016. Elsewhere in the Orlando market, iHeartMedia's talk-formattedWTKS-FM featured alternative on nights and weekends, and also aired on two HD subchannels in the Orlando market,WOCL-HD2 (until 2019) andWJRR-HD3 (until July 2024), the latter of which also used the brandAlt as standardized by iHeartMedia. This name conflict with iHeart resulted in WQMP quietly changing its on-air brand toFM 101.9 on December 4 of that year.[17][18]
In September 2020, most of the local DJs and programming staff were laid off and replaced by out-of-market programming.[19]
On August 1, 2024, at 4 p.m., after playing "Move Along" byThe All-American Rejects, WQMP flipped to classic hip-hop, returning to the "102 Jamz" branding; the first song under the relaunched format was "Lose Control" byMissy Elliott andCiara. With the flip, regional vice president Ross Mahoney left the station; Miguel "Mijo" Arizarry, the brand manager at Audacy-ownedWPOW across the state inMiami (which itself had undergone a similar quasi-revival of their longtime brand earlier that year, though it had not been dropped like WQMP had), would be hired in the same position for WQMP. With the change, Audacy requested a call letter change back to WJHM, which took effect on August 8.[20]
On October 3, 2024, WJHM announced the return of Dwight ‘DJ D-Strong’ Ricketts as afternoon host. Prior to this, he was part ofiHeartMedia’sWTKS-HD2/W283AN as program director and weekend on-air staffer forWXXL before he was laid off as part of a nationwide series of layoffs in August 2024. He was also part of WJHM during its initial iteration as “102 JAMZ” from 2003 until the station’s flip to CHR as “101.9 AMP Radio” in 2014.[21]
On November 21, 2024, WJHM announced the return of Lizzette Perez, this time as a mid-day host.[22]
WJHM activated its HD2 subchannel at the same time it started its HD radio operations at some point in the mid-2000s, which originally carried anurban gospel format, branded as "102 Gospel Jamz", from the 2000s until 2018. In August 2019, WQMP-HD2 was supposed to flip to "Channel Q", anLGBTQ-orientedtalk/dance music format based inLos Angeles.[23] Since the HD2 stream did not appear on the station, it was placed on the HD2 subchannel of sister stationWOMX-FM in early November 2019. The HD2 stream then reappeared later in 2020 carrying an alternative format featuring new releases, known as "Orlando’s New Arrivals". On February 23, 2022, WQMP-HD2 flipped to Audacy's in-houseBetQL Network.[24]
As of July 2019, WQMP-HD3 was carrying a Haitian format from an unknown source. The HD2 and HD3 subchannels were removed around early 2020. In late 2020, the HD3 subchannel reappeared and became the new home for "Channel Q" in Orlando after being dropped by WOMX-FM’s HD2 subchannel at some point in early-to-mid 2020. In January 2022, “Channel Q” returned to WOMX-HD2, which led to the HD3 subchannel becoming a secondary feed forAudacy’s New Arrivals. The HD3 subchannel was turned off until later in 2023, where the Haitian-language radio format returned on the HD3 sub channel after a 3-year hiatus. It was turned off again as of early 2024. In May 2024, Central Florida Education Foundation, owner ofWPOZ, moved its urban gospel-formatted “G-Praise” from its HD3 subchannel to WQMP’s HD3 subchannel under a leasing agreement withAudacy. This returned the format to an HD subchannel of the station for the first time in six years, when WQMP-HD2's "102 Gospel Jamz" format was dropped.