WQMX


WQMX - branded FM 94.9 WQMX - is a commercial country radio station licensed to Medina, Ohio. Owned by Rubber City Radio Group, Inc., the station primarily serves the Akron metro area, but also can be heard in Greater Cleveland and Canton. The WQMX studios are located in Akron, while the station transmitter resides in the neighboring suburb of Copley Township. Besides a standard analog transmission, WQMX's programming is also available online.

History

WQMX began as WDBN on October 17, 1960, originally under license to Barberton, Ohio. The station had a quiet sign-on, with no stories or coverage in area newspapers until a mention within an appliance store advertisement in the Orrville Courier Crescent that December 15th.
WDBN was one of the early adopters of the beautiful music format that minimized announcements and included no vocal music. Jim Schulke, one of the early beautiful music format programmers, developed much of his programming philosophies at the station. WDBN was also an early adopter of FM stereo, broadcasting in FM stereo by November 1961. The station also became one of the first FM stations in the Cleveland market to fully automate programming, having installed the equipment in 1964 for purposes of format control. Consequently, WDBN attained a significant ratings presence by 1966, drawing more listeners than WKYC during the midday time period; Ted Niarhos boasted that the station was now able to compete for advertisers with the Cleveland market's AM stations. A WDBN advertisement in the Cleveland Plain Dealer promoted itself as the "Miracle of Medina".
When the FCC limited class B FM signals to a maximum ERP of 50 kW, WDBN was "grandfathered" and allowed to maintain its 118 kW signal. As a result, the station blanketed the Cleveland market and could be heard throughout Northeast Ohio and was frequently heard as far away as Flint, Michigan, although its signal in Cleveland proper was spotty due to the terrain between Cleveland and Medina, due to the tower residing in the unincorporated village of River Styx on an unnamed county road eventually renamed "Tower Road". By May 19, 1965, the station had changed its city of license to Medina, Ohio. A windstorm in Medina County on February 1967 destroyed WDBN's tower; as insurance refused to cover a replacement tower, station advertisers and listeners covered the costs instead.
Ted Niarhos sold WDBN to Robert Miller and associated investors in 1968 for $1 million, the highest price ever paid for an FM station at a time. Miller's father Raymond T. Miller founded WERE and WERE-FM in Cleveland, and thus had an ownership stake in parent Cleveland Broadcasting Incorporated, which also owned WLEC and WLEC-FM in Sandusky and KFAC and KFAC-FM in Los Angeles; Miller concurrently divested that stake into an irrevocable trust. Robert Miller's wife Pamela Miller also started to work for the station, eventually becoming WDBN's program director.
WDBN adopted the brand "The Quiet Island " on August 15, 1970, eventually having the phrase registered as a trademark by 1981; the trademark expired in 2002. The station's format presentation was notably very tightly focused, focusing on orchestral music and instrumentals with no improvisational moments, strict tempo settings for specific dayparts, and selections of songs with familiarity and appeal to the 25-49 demographic. WDBN was headlined in the early 1970s by veteran television newscaster Tom Field in afternoons, along with vice president Jeff Baxter, program director Gary Short, news director Walt Henrich, and announcers Cameron Douglas and Brooks Morton. Veteran announcer David Mark joined WDBN as a morning announcer in 1980, replacing Jim Field. The station was one of many in the region to carry a beautiful music format during the late 1970s and early 1980s; area competitors included Cleveland market stations WQAL, WDOK and WKSW ; Akron market station WAEZ ; and Elyria-licensed WBEA.
The station was sold to Gordon-Thomas Communications, Inc.—headed by Gordon Steinbeck and Thom Mandel—for $4.6 million on March 1988, the deal closed that June 2nd. Steinbeck and Mandel were local broadcasting veterans; Steinbeck previously served as general manager for WLTF and WRMR, and Mandel was formerly WGAR-FM's program director. After taking over WDBN on August 15, 1988, the call letters were changed to WQMX and the format was changed to adult contemporary as "Mix 94.9"; radio personality Bill Miller was heard during this time. It switched to a country format on April 5, 1993.
Gordon-Thomas Communications changed its name to Rubber City Radio Group on December 6, 1993, the same day that it purchased WAKR and WONE-FM. Under Rubber City's direction, the station has targeted the Akron broadcast market as "Akron's Own Country", though it is still heard in much of the Cleveland area.
On December 30, 2019, Cleveland market sister station WNWV began simulcasting WQMX, the simulcast is regarded to be a temporary one, pending a format switch in the coming days.

Current programming

Nearly all programming on WQMX is local in origin. Weekday personalities include: the morning team of Scott Wynn and Sarah Kay; Lynn Kelly middays; Ken Steel afternoons; Cherise Richards evenings; and Eric Matthews overnights. On January 24, 2019, Kay was announced as the new WQMX assistant program director, while also remaining as co-host of the station's morning show.