Big City then purchased the station later in the year and gave it the call sign WWYY, to match the others in the network.
The increasing presence of Hispanic investors beginning in 1999 led to changes to Spanish-language formats at other simulcast stations in the company, and its financial position worsened.
It proceeded to break up the network and sell all of them except for WWYY, which it retained and relaunched as adult contemporary "Lite 107".
The station moved from its Hackettstown, New Jersey home to Nassau's Stroudsburg facilities that also housed WVPO and WSBG.
In a strange twist of irony, Worth and Tighe retained the transmitter site in Belvidere, which Nassau uses to broadcast "The Bone".
In 2006, Nassau arranged the sale of its Poconos/Lehigh Valley cluster to an African American owned company called Access.1 Communications, including WWYY, but the deal fell through.
Riley Reed handled mornings, "Becker" was on afternoons, Joe Brown did the night show and Liam was on weekends and fill-ins for the other jocks.
The station became notorious for giving away tickets to local and regional shows, and bringing in artists for "Spin Sessions" at the ArtsQuest Center at SteelStacks.
On April 16, 2016, Spin Radio began simulcasting on 94.7 W234AX Allentown, which also broadcasts on WODE-HD2, further expanding its signal into the Lehigh Valley.
On October 14, 2019, WWYY changed their format from alternative rock to a simulcast of country-formatted WCTO 96.1 FM Easton, Pennsylvania.
[5][6] In November, NB Broadcasting filed a motion to assign its rights to the stations to Connoisseur Media.