WOGI

Radio station in Moon Township, Pennsylvania, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

40°35′14.00″N 80°25′15.00″W

Broadcast areaPittsburgh, PA (Allegheny County, Butler County, & Beaver County, PA)
East Liverpool, OH (Columbiana County, OH)
Weirton, WV (Hancock County & Brooke County, WV)
Steubenville, OH (Jefferson County, OH)
BrandingFroggy 104.3
Quick facts Simulcast with WOGG Oliver, Broadcast area ...
WOGI
Simulcast with WOGG Oliver
Broadcast areaPittsburgh, PA (Allegheny County, Butler County, & Beaver County, PA)
East Liverpool, OH (Columbiana County, OH)
Weirton, WV (Hancock County & Brooke County, WV)
Steubenville, OH (Jefferson County, OH)
Frequency104.3 MHz
BrandingFroggy 104.3
Programming
FormatCountry music
Ownership
Owner
  • Forever Media
  • (FM Radio Licenses, LLC)
WPKL, WKPL, WOGG
History
First air date
April 15, 1959 (as WOHI-FM)
Former call signs
2000-2009: WOGF
1974-2000: WELA
1967-1974: WRTS
1959-1967: WOHI-FM
Call sign meaning
Variant of "Froggy"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID13711
ClassB
ERP13,000 watts
HAAT219 meters (720 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
40°35′14.00″N 80°25′15.00″W
Translator105.5 W288BO (Pittsburgh)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteFroggy 104.3 Online
Close

WOGI (104.3 FM) is a radio station that broadcasts a Froggy-branded, country music, format. Licensed in the Pittsburgh suburb of Moon Township, Pennsylvania, United States, the station serves the Pittsburgh Media Market.

This station serves as the de facto flagship station of Forever Media, LLC (based in Pittsburgh) and simulcasts on WOGG.

History

WOGI on a SPARC HD Radio with RDS.

WOGI signed on the air April 15, 1959 as WOHI-FM, the FM sister station of WOHI, both owned by East Liverpool Broadcasting Company.[2] WOHI and WOHI-FM were sold to Constrander Corporation, owned by Joseph D. Coons for $175,000 on December 20, 1960.[3] The acquisition of the stations took effect January 27, 1961. [4] WOHI-FM changed callsigns to WRTS in June 1967,[5] and in November 1971, Coons sold both WOHI and WRTS to Frank Mangano for $290,493; however, the name of the company remained the same under the new owner.[6][7] WRTS changed callsigns once again to WELA in May 1974. In the mid-1970s, WELA was an easy listening format.[8][9]

By 1981, the easy listening format was dropped in favor of a C&W format. By the late 1990s, the station had a classic hits format dubbed "Classic Hits 104."

Keymarket purchased both WOHI and WELA in 2000. [10] The new owner changed the callsign to WOGF on July 7, 2000,[11] and adopted a country music format with the "Froggy" moniker; a format which continues today.

WOGF recently changed its city of license to Moon Township, Pennsylvania from East Liverpool, Ohio. The tower location remains in Beaver County, Pennsylvania.

WOGF assumed the callsign WOGI in 2009, a callsign that was previously used on 98.3, which is a station in Pittsburgh that Keymarket sold to EMF in 2009. The new callsign on 98.3 is WPKV.

WOGI was partially simulcast on WOGG in Oliver, Pennsylvania for many years. The two stations had separate morning shows but were simulated throughout the day. In July 2020, the stations combined into a full simulcast are known as Froggy 104.3 and Froggy 94.9.

WOGI dropped all of its local programming outside morning drive in October 2025, with the station’s final local on-air personality (morning host Jeremy “Danger” Mulder) departing the following month. The station now carries the Mainstream Country network from Westwood One full time.[12][13]

References

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