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WQQK

WQQK
City Goodlettsville, Tennessee
Broadcast area Nashville, Tennessee
Branding 92-Q
Slogan The Big Station!
Frequency 92.1 MHz(also on HD Radio)
First air date October 16, 1970
Format Urban Adult Contemporary
ERP 3,500 watts
HAAT 133 meters
Class A
Facility ID 52521
Callsign meaning The Q from WQQK is used in 92-Q branding
Owner Cumulus Media Inc.
(Cumulus Licensing LLC)
Sister stations WGFX, WKDF, WSM-FM, WWTN
Webcast Listen Live
Website 92qnashville.com

WQQK (92-Q) is an Urban Adult Contemporary FM radio station broadcasting in the Nashville, Tennessee market on a frequency of 92.1 MHz. Its transmitter site is in Goodlettsville, Tennessee (its city of license), and its studios are located in Nashville's Music Row district.

Beginning in the 1970s as the pioneering station of the "rock oldies" format in the Nashville market, "92-Q" WQQK was later reformatted to Urban contemporary format and currently features a large proportion of rap music in its programming, albeit only Old school hip hop in regular rotation nowadays, which is a rarity for the predominantly R&B/Classic Soul Urban AC format, due to competition from WUBT. It is consistently one of the highest-rated stations in the Nashville market according to Arbitron despite broadcasting with only 3,000 watts of power. It has long been controlled by the Dickey family, controlling figures in the Cumulus Media organization.

Today WQQK carries Tom Joyner in the mornings, and D. L. Hughley (who replaced Michael Baisden) in the afternoons. The station primarily plays 1990s and current R & B.

On September 16, 2011, two of WQQK's sister stations, WRQQ and WNFN, were placed into an independent trust (Volt Radio, LLC) while Cumulus sought a buyer. The move was forced by FCC ownership limits following Cumulus' acquisition of Citadel Broadcasting, which resulted locally in WKDF and WGFX joining the Cumulus cluster. The FCC, as of 2011, allows a single company to own a maximum of five FM stations and two AM stations in any given market. To meet these guidelines in Nashville, Cumulus was forced to spin off two of its seven FM stations, and the company chose WRQQ and WNFN, traditionally its two lowest-performing stations.


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