WFDF (910 kHz), which brands itself as 910 AM Superstation, is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Farmington Hills, Michigan, and serving Metro Detroit.
the station featured a full service, middle of the road format of popular adult music, news and sports, targeting Flint.
It experimented with a Top 40 rock format (using the nickname "Giant 91") for a time in the early 1970s, but the station shifted its music mix back toward Adult Contemporary by 1975.
[4] In the 1980s, as popular music formats on AM were increasingly shifting to FM, WFDF became an adult standards station aimed at older demographics.
(Providing an interference-free nighttime signal to Flint from the Monroe County site, without exceeding the 50,000 watt maximum power limit, would have been practically impossible.)
With the two AM 900 stations now silenced, this paved the way for WFDF to substantially increase its power and move into the more profitable Detroit radio market.
[citation needed] On November 9, 2015, Adell re-launched the station as "the Superstation", with an African American talk radio format.
[14] On August 11, 2023, Adell suddenly announced that the station would rebrand to an "all-sports format" with a local morning show host to be named,[15] though several media outlets speculated that Adell's financial issues (including the attempted sale of WADL-TV to Mission Broadcasting) was a part of him selling off assets during a personal financial crisis.
[14] Switch to conservative talk On September 1, 2023, Adell Media instead announced that WFDF would flip to a conservative talk format on September 5, featuring a local morning show hosted by Justin Barclay (formerly of WOOD), along with most of the standard Premiere Networks daily syndicated schedule, including Glenn Beck, Clay Travis and Buck Sexton, Sean Hannity, and Jesse Kelly, along with several other syndicated programs.
[20] WFDF has an advantage in terms of signal coverage area[21][22] over WDTK, having a 50 kW daytime signal (and 25 kW night) that reaches from Monroe through Genesee counties, covering nearly the entire Southeast Michigan radio market and into the city of Flint day and night, giving WFDF cross-market coverage, while WDTK (with its constant 1kW signal[23]) and its FM translator have coverage that is restricted only into the densely populated areas of Northern Wayne, and southern Oakland and Macomb Counties.