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WJFK-FM (106.7 "106.7 The Fan") is a licensed to Manassas, Virginia, and serving the Washington metropolitan area. WJFK-FM airs a and is owned and operated by Audacy, Inc.

WJFK-FM's studios are located on Half Street SE near the Navy Yard in Southeast Washington. The is located in Falls Church, Virginia, near the intersection of (U.S. Route 29) and the Capital Beltway.

WJFK-FM broadcasts in the format. It carries two co-owned local sports stations on its subchannels, and WJFK (AM). WTEM simulcasts WJFK-FM part-time on weekends.


Programming
On weekdays, WJFK-FM has local personalities hosting sports shows in morning , middays and afternoons. Late nights and weekends, Infinity Sports Network programming is heard.

WJFK-FM is the flagship radio station for local broadcasts of the Washington Capitals and Washington Nationals. WJFK-FM also clears and Sports Radio USA's coverage of the National Football League. For local college sports coverage, WJFK-FM carries Virginia Tech Hokies football and men's basketball as well as Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball.


History

WPRW-FM and WEZR
On April 4, 1961, the station first as WPRW-FM. It was owned by the Prince William Broadcasting Company and was the to AM 1460 WPRW (now WKDV). The two stations their programming, directed mostly to listeners in and around Manassas and Prince William County. WPRW-FM broadcast with an effective radiated power of 30,000 , but only using a 160-foot tower, so it was unable to cover the larger Washington . In 1966, the transmitter was moved to the AM site west of Manassas. ()

In 1967, WPRW-FM was sold to Radio Fairfax-Prince William, a Fairfax-based firm that owned radio in that city. The transmitter was moved to Fairfax and the callsign changed to WEZR, airing 15-minute sweeps of , mostly instrumental of popular songs, including Hollywood and showtunes. Ultimately, the entire company renamed itself EZ Communications later in 1968, later going on to buy other stations nationwide and apply the format there. A further power boost to 50,000 watts, improving coverage in the Washington market, was approved in 1973.

While WEZR and its sister stations remained successful into the 1980s, the easy format was seen as attracting older listeners, while most advertisers were seeking a younger . In 1982, EZ tweaked the format used by its three remaining music outlets—WEZR, in Richmond and in Charlotte—to add more vocals.

In the early 1980s, WEZR was a simulcast partner of and aired the audio of its concerts in stereo.


Top 40 and new age
On January 1, 1985, the station flipped to Top 40 as WBMW "B106.7". It was positioned against two other Washington-area Top 40 stations: , owned by ABC, and , owned by Doubleday Broadcasting. WBMW was acquired by New York City-based Infinity Broadcasting in April 1987.

Infinity, at first, flipped WBMW to an format, but it only lasted a few weeks. On May 8, 1987, WBMW switched to , a forerunner of the format. The station simply called itself "106.7 WBMW". The included jazz-influenced instrumentals and some titles, with limited chatter from the . This format lasted about a year and a half.


Rock and hot talk
On October 3, 1988, the station flipped to an album-oriented rock format as WJFK, with the new call sign named after John F. Kennedy. The station became the Washington affiliate for the syndicated Howard Stern Show. This marked Stern's return to the market for the first time since he was let go from rival rock station WWDC-FM in 1982.

Over time, WJFK began adding other talk shows targeted at young men, similar to Stern. Eventually, WJFK had switched over to a full-time format. Programs on the station during this era include Stern, Don and Mike, Opie & Anthony, G. Gordon Liddy, , Bill O'Reilly, Ron & Fez and the . In 1991, Infinity began to WJFK programming on co-owned AM 1300 in . That station switched its callsign to WJFK, so 106.7 added an FM and became WJFK-FM. From 1995 to 2005 WJFK-FM was the flagship radio station for the then-Washington Redskins (now Washington Commanders).

Howard Stern departed his terrestrial network of stations in 2005, including WJFK-FM, when he left for Sirius Satellite Radio. WJFK-FM rebranded as "" in October 2005, as part of Infinity's plans for a nationwide hot talk network. (Two months later, Infinity was renamed .) The Sports Junkies would move from the midday slot to replace Stern as WJFK-FM's morning hosts. However, the Free FM format did not attract enough listeners, and many of those stations switched to other formats. The "Free FM" branding was dropped by WJFK-FM in 2007, even though it continued a while longer as a hot talk outlet under the slogan "Washington's Talk Superstation".


Sports radio
On July 20, 2009, WJFK-FM became "106.7 The Fan". With WJFK-FM's changeover to "The Fan", The Junkies (who would later change their name back to "The Sports Junkies") were retained, while The Big O and Dukes Show and The Mike O'Meara Show were dropped.

WJFK-FM acquired the rights to Washington Wizards basketball and Washington Nationals baseball. It also began simulcasting Washington Capitals playoff games with starting with the 2008 Stanley Cup Playoffs, later becoming the team's flagship before the 2012-13 NHL season. For college sports, WJFK-FM became the Washington area home of Virginia Tech Hokies football and men's basketball.

On March 8, 2009, WJFK-FM signed on the nation's first subchannel, carrying co-owned sports station from . This fourth HD subchannel was later dropped, leaving WFAN in New York City on the HD2 subchannel and from on the HD3 subchannel. On June 21, 2021, WJFK (AM) flipped to a sports gambling format, branded as "The Bet Washington", with programming from the co-owned and CBS Sports Radio (now Infinity Sports Network). With the flip, WJFK AM shifted its HD simulcast to WJFK-FM-HD3.

On September 9, 2015, WJFK announced that the station would become the new flagship station for Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball games.

Immediately prior to the 2016-17 NHL season, WJFK controversially declined to renew its deal with the Capitals, with program director Chris Kinard stating he desired a more consistent sports-talk schedule in the evenings. The Capitals were relegated to existing radio affiliate WFED. Since the Nationals and Washington Wizards took precedence on that station, any conflicting Capitals games were left with no home radio coverage at all, leading to complaints from fans and the media. After the Capitals struck a stopgap deal to place its games on WWDC-HD2 and an midway through that season, the team and WJFK reached a new deal in time for the following season.

On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with . The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on the 17th. On December 30, 2020, it was announced that would be working a Saturday morning show, replacing his weekday afternoon show on WJFK's Entercom sister station, .


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