City | Caledonia, Ohio (Marion, Ohio market) |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Upper Sandusky, Marion, Bucyrus, Ohio |
Branding | Majic 95.9 |
Slogan | Marion's Hit Music |
Frequency | 95.9 (MHz) (FM) |
First air date | December 11, 1973 (as WYAN-FM) |
Format | Hot AC |
ERP | 4,600 watts |
HAAT | 114 meters |
Class | A |
Callsign meaning |
WYaNdoT County (home county of WYNT's former city of license, Upper Sandusky) |
Affiliations |
Premium Choice iHeartRadio Ohio State IMG Sports Network |
Owner |
iHeartMedia, Inc. (CC Licenses, LLC) |
Website | www.majic959.com |
WYNT (95.9 FM) is a Hot AC station formerly located in Upper Sandusky, Ohio now located with its studios in Marion, Ohio and its transmitter and city of license moved to Caledonia, Ohio. It broadcasts music from the 1980s through today as "Majic 95.9" and is part of the iHeartMedia, Inc.'s Marion cluster which includes WMRN-FM and WMRN-AM. Its Cleveland FM sister WMJI also uses the "Majic" branding for its 1960s/70s oldies station. WYNT was also formerly an oldies station under the same branding.
The station had for years, served as a full-service adult contemporary/country music station serving Upper Sandusky, the seat of Wyandot County, as well as the communities surrounding Upper Sandusky, which is not to be confused with the town of Sandusky, Ohio...about 50 miles due north in Erie County, best known as the home of Cedar Point.
According to the 1981 Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook, WYNT first went on the air on December 11, 1973 with the original call letters WYAN, licensed to Upper Sandusky.
The station was founded by Wendell A. Triplett, president of Triplett Broadcasting of Bellefontaine, Ohio; which also owned the former WTOO (now WBLL) in Bellefontaine, founded the former WPNM (currently WBUK) in Ottawa and the former WAXT (later WHTI,now WBKQ) in Alexandria, Indiana. Company vice president Robert S. Triplett served as the station's first general manager. T.P. Communications, a company headed by Charles Earl, then acquired WYAN in October 1979. Forest Whitehead, who would become a driving force in the station's future rescue from financial turmoil, became the station's general manager in 1980.
By 1981 the company had run into financial trouble and WYNT was silenced. However, the license was already in the planning stages of a return to the air by the end of 1982.
Determined to keep the radio station in local hands, then-general manager and morning DJ Forest Whitehead and a local funeral director formed an ownership group, which subsequently returned the station to the air under the name U.S. Broadcasting in 1986. The funeral director stated he would invest in the station on the condition that it would provide the community with local high school sports game broadcasts, especially football.