WHIN is a Country station from Gallatin, Tennessee near Nashville. Anybody know what "Love That Wave" was referring to?
UPDATE: See comments.
A daily look into one of the world's largest collections of radio station bumper stickers and memorabilia.
WBMX (W Black Music EXperience) was an Urban Contemporary station in Chicago, Illinois from 1975 to 1988. They also carried a highly influential Saturday night dance show hosted by the Hot Mix 5 which led directly to the creation of House Music. The city of Chicago even named a downtown street after them.
WBMX became Urban Adult Contemporary WVAZ "V103" in October, 1988.
KMHK "95.5 The Hawk" was a Classic Hits station from Hardin, Montana. 95.5 FM is currently "News Radio 95" KCHH while the KMHK calls, mascot and format have moved to 103.7 FM licensed to Billings, MT.
KDHN is a Country station licensed to Dimmitt, Texas. This sticker dates from around 1982 according to this list of Coca-Cola slogans.
CFAR is an Adult Contemporary station from the wonderfully named Flin Flon, Manitoba.
4BCR "Coral Coast Radio" is a community broadcaster from Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia. They have a variety of block formatted programming including Rock, Jazz, Blues, Country, Easy Listening and Ethnic.
KMTW - Las Vegas, Nevada. Currently Spanish as KRLV.
KKZR - Houston, Texas. Currently News/Talk KNTH.
WLPZ - Westbrook, Maine. Currently carries a Sports format as WRED.
101.1 FM first went on the air in 1963 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as WDVR. They became Adult Contemporary "B101.1" around 1993 and remain the only independently owned station in the market. WBEB was the highest-rated station in Philly according to the latest Arbitron ratings.
WLLK is a CHR station licensed to Somerset, Kentucky at 102.3 FM. From 2001 to 2005 WLLK lived at 93.9 FM licensed to Burnside, KY with the same format (I'm assuming.) WLLK is owned by Clear Channel Communications and this decal seems like a version of their ubiquitous Mix stickers.




WFUV is a National Public Radio affiliate owned by Fordham University in New York, New York. They play Adult Album Alternative music along with some Folk, Pop and Jazz.
WABX was an Album Oriented Rock station from Detroit, Michigan. In the late 1960s they played freeform progressive rock but moved toward mainstream AOR in the 1970s. By the 80s WABX was the third ranked Rock station in Detroit behind WRIF and WLLZ. They flipped to Soft Rock "Class FM" WCLS in 1984. 99.5 FM currently carries a Country format as WYCD. WABX's logo was Long-time Washington DC/Baltimore Alternative station WHFS (W High Fidelity Stereo) will return to the airwaves at 97.5 FM on August 1. In the 1960s and '70s WHFS was a Freeform Rock station located at 102.3 FM and had been a Modern Rock station until 1983 when they moved to 99.1 FM. HFS flipped abruptly to Tropical Latin "El Zol" WLZL in 2005. WHFS is officially the HD-2 feed of WWMX at 106.5 FM and translated on W248AO at 97.5 FM licensed to Baltimore, Maryland.
EDIT: I just finished watching a documentary titled "Feast Your Ears: The Story of WHFS 102.3". This excellent feature-length doc focuses on WHFS' years as a Freeform Rock station with tons of interviews from station employees and performers who were heard on--and were fans of--the beloved station. As of this edit in October 2024, it's available to stream for free on the PBS app.
The 1988 Monsters of Rock was a festival tour featuring Metallica, Dokken, Scorpions, Kingdom Come and headlined by Van Halen. This WRIF sticker was released to coincide with the June 16th and 17th stop of the tour at the Pontiac Silverdome near Detroit, Michigan. WRIF has been giving out various bumper stickers in the classic "racetrack" shape for much of its 40 year history. Most feature a band's name or logo but some have included sports teams, DJs, and station slogans. The station's website has a section with many of their decals over the years. There are probably hundreds (maybe thousands?) of different WRIF stickers out there. Some people have even made a hobby out of collecting WRIF stix.