WRDT

[3][4][5] The nighttime tower is located in Royal Oak Township, and is shared with several Detroit area full power commercial FM stations, namely WDVD, WYCD, WMGC-FM and WCSX.

[7] The translator is located along the Ferndale- Hazel Park border on Woodward Heights, and is co-located with the broadcast facility of sister station WCHB 1340 AM and Audacy owned WOMC 104.3 FM.

National religious leaders heard on WRDT include Alistair Begg, Chuck Swindoll, Jim Daly and Adrian Rogers.

WQTE personalities during this time included Tom Clay (who emceed popular dances for the station at Cobo Hall), and Ed McKenzie, best remembered to Detroit audiences as "Jack the Bellboy" on WJBK radio in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

"Honey Radio" was one of the first all-oldies stations in the nation and specialized in music from the first generation of rock and roll including doo-wop hits.

Honey Radio featured a playlist incorporating records that never made, or scored low on, the national charts but were hits in the Detroit market.

Initially, "Honey Radio" programming was also heard on sister station WHNE-FM 94.7, but in 1976, Greater Media changed format of the FM to Soft Adult Contemporary as "Magic 94.7 WMJC."

On December 2, 1994, "Honey Radio" came to an end, as Greater Media began to broker time on the station to local Spanish-language broadcasters.

In June 1997, Greater Media sold WLLZ to Crawford Broadcasting, which changed the format to Christian Talk and Teaching, as AM 560, The WMUZ Word Station.

AM 560 did not change its real call sign to WMUZ but it used this positioner to tie the AM station to Crawford's flagship Contemporary Christian outlet, WMUZ-FM 103.5.

The WLLZ call sign was reassigned to an LP (low power) TV station in the Traverse City area shortly after AM 560 dropped them.

However, on April 13, 2018, Cumulus Media filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regarding interference with the signal of the company's Ann Arbor-based station WQKL, which also broadcasts at 107.1 FM.

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