WKMM

WKMM is a Country formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Kingwood, West Virginia, serving Kingwood and Preston County, West Virginia.[1] WKMM is owned and operated by Neil P. Waldeck.[2]

WKMM
CityKingwood, West Virginia
Broadcast areaKingwood, West Virginia
Preston County, West Virginia
Frequency96.7 FM MHz
Branding"96-7 K-Country"
Slogan"The Best of the New and Gold"
Programming
FormatCountry
AffiliationsAccuWeather Radio
Fox News Radio
Mainstream Country (Westwood One)
Motor Racing Network
Mountaineer Sports Network from IMG
Performance Racing Network
Yahoo! Sports Radio
Ownership
OwnerNeil P. Waldeck
(MarPat Corporation)
History
First air date1987
Technical information
Facility ID7725
ClassA
Power300 Watts
HAAT243 meters (797 ft)
Transmitter coordinates39°27′29.0″N 79°35′18.0″W
Links
WebcastWKMM Webstream
WebsiteWKMM Online

History

Studios of WKMM, located at 106 East Main Street in Kingwood.

Founded by Sandy Sue Garlitz, WKMM launched on December 2, 1987, and has always had a country format. It was the first FM band station in Preston County.

WKMM had previously went by the branding "96-7 KMM" until 2005, when it began using the "K-Country" moniker. Also in 2005, WKMM began using "StormTracker 12" weather reports over the air from local NBC affiliate, WBOY-TV in nearby Clarksburg.

In December 2009, WKMM became Preston County, West Virginia's first radio station to broadcast live online.

In late 2010, WKMM dropped weather reports from WBOY and began using AccuWeather radio reports, branded as "SkySource Weather".

Ownership/Technical

WKMM is owned by Reedsville businessman Neil P. Waldeck. From 1992 until 2005, WKMM was owned by Kingwood businessman P.J. Crogan. Studios are located on Main Street in Kingwood with their transmitter along West Virginia Route 7 near Terra Alta, West Virginia.

gollark: As I said: what you do is quite significantly determined by your environment. This environment is entirely controlled by god, as they're omnipotent. God knows the answers in advance *anyway*, as they're omnipotent.
gollark: It's a terrible test then.
gollark: You should believe in one if there's good evidence that one exists, not otherwise.
gollark: Again, clear would be "written in 50-foot letters of fire in the sky".
gollark: I don't consider this clear because it's not distinguished from the *other* religious books which also claim to be ultimate universal truth.

See also

References

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