WDGG

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox radio station

| name = WDGG

| city = Ashland, Kentucky

| country = US

| logo = WDGG 93.7 The Dawg.png

| logo_upright = .9

| area = Huntington, West Virginia

| frequency = {{frequency|93.7|MHz}}

| branding = 93-7 The Dawg

| format = Country music

| affiliations = {{ubl|Westwood One|Marshall Thundering Herd}}{{cite web|url=https://herdzone.com/sports/2018/6/14/broadcast-information|title=Broadcast Information|publisher=Marshall Thundering Herd|access-date=December 31, 2022}}

| owner = Kindred Communications

| licensee = Fifth Avenue Broadcasting Company, Inc.

| sister_stations = WCMI, WCMI-FM, WMGA, WRVC, WXBW

| airdate = {{start date and age|1948|10}}

| former_callsigns = {{ubl|WCMI-FM (1948-1970)|WAMX-FM (1970-1988)|WRVC-FM (1988-1995)}}

| callsign_meaning = "Dawg"

| licensing_authority = FCC

| facility_id = 21436

| class = C1

| erp = 100,000 watts

| haat = 226 meters

| coordinates = {{Coord|38|23|14|N|82|39|45|W|type:landmark_region:US-KY_source:FCC|display=inline,title}}

| webcast = {{listenlive|https://radio.securenetsystems.net/cwa/WDGG}}

| website = {{URL|http://937thedawg.com/}}

}}

WDGG (93.7 FM) is a country music–formatted radio station licensed to Ashland, Kentucky, serving Huntington, West Virginia, and the greater Huntington–Ashland metropolitan area. The station is owned by Kindred Communications. WDGG's studios are located on Fifth Avenue in downtown Huntington, while its transmitter facilities are off Park Avenue, near I-64 in southwestern Huntington.

In addition to its country music format, WDGG serves as the flagship station for the Marshall Thundering Herd.

History

The station signed on the air in October 1948 as WCMI-FM in Ashland as a simulcast of its AM sister station WCMI's broadcast schedule. The call letters were said to refer to the steel industry of Ashland as "Where Coal Meets Iron".

On November 20, 1970, the call letters were changed to WAMX-FM and ownership was transferred to W. Richard Martin and Stereo 94, Inc. The station broadcast with an adult contemporary music format and experimented with an album oriented rock format at night during the early 1970s.

In the mid-1970s, WAMX-FM (also known as 94X) adopted a contemporary hit radio (CHR) format until its sale to Storer broadcasting in 1983. With the sale, the studios moved to nearby Huntington, and the station adopted an album oriented rock format (AOR).{{cite web|url=http://jeff560.tripod.com/wcmi.html|title=History of WCMI, Ashland, KY|editor=Jeff Miller|access-date=May 6, 2009}}

On April 30, 1988, the call letters representing the River Cities were adopted and the license became known as WRVC-FM.{{cite web|url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/publicFacilityDetails.html?facilityId=21436|title=WDGG Call Sign History|publisher=Federal Communications Commission|access-date=May 6, 2009}} The dormant WAMX call sign was adopted by an unrelated station (at 106.3 MHz) in the Huntington market on January 6, 1997.{{cite web|url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/publicFacilityDetails.html?facilityId=60450|title=WAMX Call Sign History|publisher=Federal Communications Commission|access-date=May 6, 2009}}

In the fall of 1992, they changed the format to oldies (mostly concentrating on the 60s), and changed the tag to "Oldies 93 RVC".

The WDGG call letters were granted by the FCC on February 6, 1995. At that time, the WRVC call sign and oldies format were moved to 92.7 WCMI-FM, which continued the simulcast with WRVZ in Charleston.

References

{{Reflist|1}}

Further reading

  • {{URL|https://jeff560.tripod.com/wcmi.html|History of WCMI}}

{{Huntington WV Radio}}

{{Country Radio Stations in Kentucky}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wdgg}}

Category:1948 establishments in Kentucky

Category:Ashland, Kentucky

Category:Country radio stations in the United States

Category:Radio stations established in 1948

DGG