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WNGY

WNGY
WNGY G102.3 logo.png
City Morton, Illinois
Broadcast area Peoria, Illinois
Branding G102.3
Slogan Peoria's Throwback Station
Frequency 102.3 MHz
First air date 1976 (as WTAZ)
Format Classic hip hop
ERP 4,100 watts
HAAT 121.9 meters
Class A
Facility ID 43877
Callsign meaning W ENerGY (previous format)
Former callsigns WTAZ (1976–1999)
WFXF (1999–2000)
WDQX (2000–2014)
Owner Alpha Media
(Alpha Media Licensee LLC)
Webcast On website, click "play" button
Website g1023.com

WNGY is an FM radio station licensed for 102.3 MHz in Morton, Illinois near Peoria. It is owned by Alpha Media. WNGY's studios are at Civic Center Plaza, 331 Fulton Street, in Peoria.

The station came on the air in 1976 as WTAZ, broadcasting an oldies format with NBC features from a facility midway between Morton and Washington, Illinois, in Tazewell County (hence WTAZ). Roy Demanes (the owner of the Ramada Inn, a bank and a pharmacy in Peoria, as well as an extensive pre-need burial program) worked with Penny Press Publisher (and former WEEK-TV anchorman) Bud Carter to put the station on the air.

As of the late 1970s, the two were partners in the newspaper previously mentioned (a Peoria-based issues and entertainment oriented publication) and the radio station. Demanes exchanged his ownership in the paper for Carter's interest in the paper, then died of a heart attack a short time later.

The paper was purchased by another suburban weekly (the Observer), and Carter relocated to Atlanta where he now is Senior Chairman for the Atlanta operation of an international organization for CEOs (Vistage International).

Through most of the 1980s and 1990s, WTAZ had a talk format featuring personalities such as G. Gordon Liddy, Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Laura, and Art Bell. In 1999, those shows and call letters were moved to AM, and 102.3 became WFXF-FM broadcasting Howard Stern in the morning, and rock music. In late 2000, Stern was dropped, and WFXF-FM played classic hits. In the early 2000s, the station was sold to AAA Entertainment, which was signing on WZIM (then WDQZ) in the Bloomington-Normal market at 99.5FM. 102.3 changed format and began simulcasting a classic rock format with the Bloomington-Normal signal known as "The Eagle" and changed call letters to WDQX. AAA hired the high-profile WJBC morning show of Scott Robbins and Nancy Thiel to do mornings on the new station.

In late 2005, WDQX was sold, along with WXCL, to JMP. WDQX kept a classic rock format, but was rebranded as "Max" and the music was tweaked to be more hard rock.


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