WAKY-FM


WAKY-FM is a commercial radio station licensed to Radcliff, Kentucky, and serving the Louisville metropolitan area. It airs a classic hits format and is owned by Wakyana LLC. It carries University of Kentucky Wildcasts football and basketball. The studios are on Ring Road in Elizabethtown.
WAKY-FM is a Class C3 station. It has an effective radiated power of 3,500 watts. The transmitter is off Collings Hill Road in Lebanon Junction. The signal is concentrated on the suburbs south of Louisville. Programming is simulcast on WAKY and on three FM translators at 100.1, 104.5 and 106.3 MHz around the Louisville area.

History

The station was assigned the call sign WUOX on November 1, 1991. On October 30, 1992, the station changed its call sign to WLVK; on July 17, 1995, it became WASE, and under this identity it signed on July 25 as an oldies station, "Kool 103.5". Plans for the oldies format and WASE call sign to move to 103.5 from 105.5 in Fort Knox, and the relaunch of 105.5 as country station WLVK, had been made as early as 1993.
On May 11, 2007, the call sign was changed to WAKY; on December 3, 2014, it was modified to WAKY-FM. In May 2015, it began simulcasting on WAKY, after W&B Broadcasting purchased that station from Davidson Media a year earlier. The WAKY call sign and classic hits format are an homage to the original WAKY, a Top 40 contemporary music station from the late 1950s to the late 1970s. The original WAKY later became an oldies station from 1982 to 1986 and is now Fox Sports Radio affiliate WKRD.
Since former competitor WRKA dropped its classic hits format in favor of country music, WAKY-FM is now the only mainstream classic hits station in the Louisville market playing the pop hits of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. Currently, the WAKY-AM-FM studios are south of the Fort Knox Army Reservation in Radcliff, Kentucky, about south of Louisville.
W&B Broadcasting sold the WAKY stations to Wakyana LLC, a group led by Randy Michaels, for $1.3 million in 2025.

Translators

WAKY-AM-FM programming is also heard on three FM translators: