WMNI
Radio station in Columbus, Ohio
For the Worthington, Ohio radio station that held the call sign WMNI-FM at 103.9 FM from 2012 to 2013, see
WJKR .
WMNI (920 AM ) is a commercial radio station licensed to Columbus, Ohio , known as "Fox Sports 920" with a sports format. Locally owned by North American Broadcasting Company, Inc., WMNI serves the Columbus metropolitan area . WMNI's studios are located in Marble Cliff, Ohio , using a Columbus address, while the transmitter resides in Grove City . In addition to a standard analog transmission , WMNI is available online.
Programming
In addition to its sports talk format, WMNI carries a number of local and national sports events, including the Indy 500 , the Brickyard 400 , Notre Dame college football and Columbus Clippers Triple A baseball .
On Saturday and Sunday mornings, WMNI features talk shows such as "Plant Talk with Fred Hower" and "At Home With Gary Sullivan " as well as some paid brokered programming .[ 3] WMNI carries news updates from Fox News Radio .
History
On April 26, 1958; 66 years ago (1958-04-26 ) , WMNI first signed on the air. For most of its three decades, it had a full service , country radio format. As country music listening started to move from AM to FM in the 1980s, WMNI switched to a satellite-delivered adult standards format from Westwood One . By the late 1990s, much of the music was locally programmed using Columbus-based disc jockeys . As of August 2007, WMNI shifted back to Westwood One's "America's Best Music " format, a mix of soft oldies and standards.
On June 14, 2012 at 6:00 a.m., WMNI switched to a simulcast of WMNI-FM , which had flipped from a classic hits sound as WTDA-FM to a news format.
On July 18, 2013, the AM/FM simulcast ended, with WMNI returning to the soft oldies and adult standards format.
On June 12, 2017, WMNI changed their format from adult standards to soft adult contemporary music, branded as "Easy 95.1 & 920" (simulcast on FM translator W236CZ 95.1 FM Columbus).[ 4]
On June 14, 2022, WMNI changed their format from soft adult contemporary to sports, branded as "Fox Sports 920", with programming from Fox Sports Radio . The 95.1 translator switched to a relay of sister station WJKR 's HD2 subchannel.[ 5]
Previous logo
References
External links
By Callsign By City
Abilene, Texas
Akron-Cleveland
Albuquerque
Alma, Michigan
Alice, Texas
Anchorage, Alaska
Ashland-Mansfield
Atlanta
Attalla, Alabama
Aurora, Illinois
Austin, Texas
Bakersfield
Bakersfield
Bedford, Indiana
Binghamton
Birmingham, Alabama
Bismarck, North Dakota
Broomfield/Denver
Canton, Ohio
Cape Girardeau, Missouri
Charlottesville, Virginia
Cincinnati
Colorado City, Arizona
Columbus, Ohio
Corsicana, Texas
Crossville, Tennessee
Dayton, Ohio
Decatur, Illinois
Des Moines
Dubach, Louisiana
Easton, Pennsylvania
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
Elko, Nevada
Elyria-Lorain, Ohio
Erie, Pennsylvania
Eugene, Oregon
Fall River, Massachusetts
Flint, Michigan
Florence, Alabama
Fort Madison, Iowa
Fort Wayne, Indiana
Fresno, California
Front Royal, Virginia
Girard, Kansas
Glasford, Illinois
Glasgow, Kentucky
Glenwood, Arkansas
Gray/Portland, Maine
Green Bay
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Hartford, Connecticut
Holland/Grand Rapids, Michigan
Hooks, Texas
Houston
Humboldt, Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Jesup, Georgia
Kenova/Huntington, West Virginia
Lafayette, Louisiana
Lancaster, California
Las Vegas, Nevada
Live Oak, Florida
Los Angeles
Madison
Magnolia, Arkansas
Marble Hill, Missouri
Mauldin, South Carolina
McMinnville, Tennessee
Meridian, Mississippi
Miami
Midland, Texas
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Mina, New York
Minneapolis
Moline-Quad Cities, Iowa/Illinois
Newnan, Georgia
Newport News, Virginia
Neosho, Missouri
New Brunswick, New Jersey
New Haven, Connecticut
Omaha
Orlo Vista–Orlando, Florida
Philadelphia
Phoenix, Arizona
Pittsburgh
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Pleasant Gap, Pennsylvania
Portageville, Missouri
Portland, Oregon
Portsmouth, Ohio
Richmond, Virginia
Rochester, New Hampshire
Rochester, New York
Ruidoso
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Seattle
Shreveport, Louisiana
Sioux City, Iowa
Spartanburg, South Carolina
Spokane
Springfield, Missouri
Syracuse, New York
Tallahassee, Florida
Tampa
Toledo
Troy, New York
Tucson, Arizona
Walker, Minnesota
Watertown, New York
Westbrook/Portland, Maine
West Fargo, North Dakota
West Frankfort, Illinois
West Palm Beach, Florida
Whitefish, Montana
Wickliffe, Kentucky
Williston, South Carolina
Willmar, Minnesota
Wilmington, Delaware
Windsor Locks/Hartford, Connecticut
Yakima
Youngstown, Ohio
Satellite Radio
Ashtabula
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dayton
Fostoria
Lima
Mansfield/Mid-Ohio
Marietta/St. Marys WV
Massillon/Canton
Middleport/Pomeroy
Portsmouth
Toledo
Waverly
Wellston
Youngstown
AM stereo radio stations in the United States
By callsign By frequency