The station signed on the air as WHOP-FM in May 1948.[4] It was the first FM station to sign on in the Clarksville/Hopkinsville radio market area, and the whole westernmost segment of Kentucky. Paducah's WPAD-FM (now WDDJ) and WKYX-FM signed on in the months after. WHOP-FM began broadcasting as a simulcast of its AM sister station WHOP. However, on December 4, 1959, the station became a separate operation by changing its callsign to WRLX,[5] and beginning broadcasting an easy listening format. It was the first attempt in Kentucky at full separate FM programming since the early 1950s demise of early FM stations in the Louisville area.[6]
The station reverted its callsign back to WHOP-FM to match its AM sister station on December 28, 1964.[5] Upon the callsign change, the station began broadcasting a country music format. In the mid-2000s, in response to the station's overwhelming competition against Clarksville-based but Hopkinsville-licensed WVVR and Cadiz-based WKDZ-FM, both of which were and still are broadcasting the same format, WHOP-FM changed to its current soft adult contemporary format, and rebranded as Lite 98.7. It rebranded as LiteRock 98.7 sometime in the late 2010s.
Both WHOP-FM and its AM counterpart serve as two of three affiliates in the Clarksville/Hopkinsville market that serves as an affiliate of the University of KentuckyWildcatssports radio network, broadcasting football and men's basketball games involving the university's athletic teams.[7]WKDZ-FM in Cadiz is the other station in the area that also serve as a UK Sports Network affiliate.
HD Radio
On February 6, 2023, WHOP-FM launched a country music format on its HD2 subchannel, branded as "95.3 The Farm". It is simulcast in the analog format via former WHOP (AM) translator W237BV.[8] On the same day, an HD radio simulcast of WHOP (AM) became available on an HD3 subchannel.
HD Radio subchannels
The station's HD radio signal is multiplexed in this manner.
Freqnency (MHz-subchannel)
Callsign
Programming
98.7 FM 98.7-1 HD
WHOP-FM WHOP-HD1
Simulcast of the traditional FM signal "LiteRock 98.7" (adult contemporary)
^Nash, Francis M. (1995). Towers Over Kentucky: A History of Radio and Television in the Bluegrass State. Lexington, Kentucky: HOST Communications. p. 89. ISBN9781879688933.