Broadcast area | Canton, Ohio |
---|---|
Branding | Joy 1520 |
Frequency | 1520 kHz |
First air date | April 14, 1966 |
Format | Urban Gospel |
Power | 1,000 watts day only |
Class | D |
Facility ID | 8549 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°50′41.2″N 81°21′01.4″W / 40.844778°N 81.350389°WCoordinates: 40°50′41.2″N 81°21′01.4″W / 40.844778°N 81.350389°W (NAD83) |
Callsign meaning | "WIN-Wonderful" (former slogan) |
Former callsigns | 1989-1997: WPGY 1989: WRQK (183 days) 1966-1989: WINW |
Owner | Pinebrook Corp. |
WINW is an AM radio station that was licensed to Canton, Ohio. For its entire history the station broadcast at 1520 kHz during daytime hours only. The station was last known as "Joy 1520," and featured an Urban Gospel format.
WINW established a solid reputation as a Top 40 station in the 1960s and 1970s, using the slogan "WIN-Wonderful." Even as a daytime station with a highly directional 1000-watt signal, it was successful in Canton for over a decade, sometimes approaching double digits in the ratings, despite its obvious signal limitations. WINW had shared its frequency with WJMP located in nearby Kent, which made the Canton station difficult to hear in Northern Stark County.
New AM Top 40 competition in the form of WQIO (Q-10) (now WILB) in late 1976, as well as the increasing popularity of FM radio stations, eventually brought an end to the glory years of "WIN-Wonderful." WINW purchased FM station WHLQ (106.9) from Susquehanna Radio Corporation in 1978, changing its call sign to WOOS-FM, and installed an automated Top 40 format there, while WINW changed to a Big Band/Adult Standards format in 1981 and then went through a string of format and call letter changes for the next 15 years.
WINW evolved into an adult contemporary station by the mid-1980s, became an automated oldies station in 1987, changed to WRQK (AM) on February 14, 1989 when it was coupled with WRQK-FM, changed back to WINW on August 16, 1989, then changed once again to WPGY on April 5, 1996 (by that time owned by Sabre Communications, who was "parking" the WPGY call letters for use on its new FM in Elmira, New York), and finally changed back to WINW on March 27, 1997.
The 1997 version of WINW was originally a Contemporary Christian station, but leased an increasing amount of its air time to preachers and Urban Gospel music, which eventually became its final format.