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| Broadcast area | Lima, Ohio |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 92.1MHz |
| Branding | New Country 92.1 The Frog |
| Programming | |
| Format | Country |
| Affiliations | Compass Media Networks Westwood One |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WCIT,WDOH,WEGE,WWSR | |
| History | |
First air date | July 1,1964 (as WERM) |
Former call signs | WERM (1964–1978) WAXC (1978–1985) WZOQ (1985–2008) WWSR (2008–2009) |
Call sign meaning | FroGgyFM (former nickname) |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 74293 |
| Class | A |
| ERP | 3,000watts |
| HAAT | 100 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°39′20.00″N84°06′54.00″W / 40.6555556°N 84.1150000°W /40.6555556; -84.1150000 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen Live |
| Website | 921thefrog.com |
WFGF (92.1FM, "92.1 The Frog") is a commercialradio station based inWapakoneta, Ohio, broadcasting acountry musicformat. Its studios are located inLima, Ohio, with their transmitter located inCridersville, Ohio, between Wapakoneta and Lima.
Originally called WERM (for its main air personalityErnestineR.Miller, wife of the station's founder, Harry B. Miller, who was later withWHJM before she died in 2013) when it first began .broadcasting in 1964, under the licensee name West Central Ohio Broadcasters Inc.. WERM was a family owned and operated station located west of Wapakoneta on County Road 33-A (oldU.S. Route 33) inMoulton which aired local news and sports. Its format was a mix of traditionalmiddle of the road andbeautiful music. In the mid-1970s the gradual shift towards contemporary pop began with the evening shift "6 to 10 Club" and occasional rock music. It also operated an in-house training school for local aspiring broadcasters along with jazz-formatted Xenia sister stations WELX (now southern gospelWGNZ in Fairborn) and WHBM-FM (now active rockWZDA in Beavercreek.)
In 1978 WERM was purchased by John A. Bulmer (dba:Bulmer Communications Inc.)who previously managed the former WPNM in Ottawa (nowWBUK) with the call letters switched to WAXC (previously used at an AM station in Rochester, New York nowWHIC) as "Waxcee 92 FM...Your Radio Station" putting greater emphasis on the Wapakoneta/St. Marys community while gradually moving closer to the Lima market when its transmitter was moved from its studios in Moulton to Cridersville in the early 1980s. The station's new owner went as far as installing newer audio equipment and airing major market-styled jingles produced byPAMS andJAM Creative Productions along with high energy production values giving it a more professional sound and image over the former WERM with a softadult contemporary-day/Hot AC-evening format.
In 1981, WAXC's transmitter was moved to a new tower site located on east National Rd. in Cridersville to better cover Lima. When WAXC became WZOQ, the main studio was moved to Lima....hence the original WERM tower at Moulton was dismantled while the original 1960s "A-Frame" brick house studio building still stands next door to the former Swonger's Furniture City (now J & S Electronics) and is currently unoccupied.
After a short-lived format switch to an adult standards/pop oldies mix, WAXC was sold in 1986 to Arrow Communications who (under Bulmer's direction as General manager before his departure to WRQC Cleveland) changed the station's call sign to WZOQ "92 ZOO" which became Lima's outlet forTop 40 Hits. In 1991 the station was sold to Pennsylvania-based Keymarket and then to Forever Broadcasting in 1993 slowly moving the operation from the small 1960s-styled brick house in Moulton to a formerKFC restaurant on Cable Road in Lima. It also added sister station WYRX later in 1993 both of whom eventually moved up the street to the former WCIT/WLSR-FM studios(nowWCIT/WEGE respectively) when Forever purchased both stations and added country newcomer WFGF (formerly WYRX) to the new cluster operation which is where it is located today. Conor Goodson, an area teenager at the time (and now a successful renewable energy executive), was briefly employed as the station's mascot during the mid 90's, donning the purple parrot costume and waving at passers-by at the Cable Road location in Lima.
In 2003, WZOQ along with other Forever-owned Lima stations were sold to Connecticut-based Maverick Media and a year later purchased classic countryWDOH in Delphos switching to a softadult contemporary format. At midnight on April 2, 2007, the station was rebranded as "Star 92.1". A week later on April 9, 2007, its callsign was changed fromWZOQ toWWSR. TheWZOQ callsign was moved to its sister station at 940 AM, the former WLJM, before reverting to its original WCIT call sign in 2009.
On June 1, 2009, the sports/talk format on sister station WZOQ was moved over to the 93.1 FM facility, while the country music format and WFGF calls were moved to the 92.1 FM facility, replacing the soft AC"Star" format. WFGF since adjusted their on-air nickname, and are now referred to as "New Country 92.1 The Frog."
Effective July 1, 2013, WWSR and the rest of the Lima cluster of Maverick Media LLC was purchased by a local company, Childers Media Group LLC, at a price of $2.1 million; studios and offices were moved to 57 Town Square in downtown Lima.
Effective February 15, 2018, Childers Media Group sold WFGF and four sister stations to Woof Boom Radio of Lima LLC for $2.425 million.
also owned WELX/WHBM-FM Xenia
also owned WZNY Augusta, WTNN-A/WFFX-F Tuscaloosa, WFRG A/F Utica, KLIO Quad Cities, KZBB Ft. Smith, KHUM Topeka, WENI-A/WZKZ-F Corning
also owned stations in Pittsburgh, Wheeling and Riverside Calif.
also owned stations in Altoona, Johnstown, State College and Meadville
also owns stations in Santa Rosa Calif, Eau Claire WI and Rockford Ill.
with offices and studios moved to 57 Town Square in downtown Lima.