The station signed on in October 1968 as WFDT, featuring a
MOR music format. After a time as a
soft AC station with the
WKSY calls, the station changed to
CHR/
Top 40 in the late 1980s as
WZRQ, but financial problems paired with low ratings eventually led to the station going off the air in August 1988. On September 26, 1990, 106.3 returned to the air as
WBBE, known on air as
"The Killer Bee, The All New B-106 FM". The call letters were later changed to
WDJB on November 1, 1990. During The Killer Bee era, the station competed strongly with
WMEE for all hit music listeners in Fort Wayne. At its peak, it was one of the market's most popular radio stations. This format would remain until April 1997. In April 1997, WDJB flipped to
Adult Standards as
WSHI ("Sunny 106.3"), featuring
Westwood One's
standards format. "Sunny" was a ratings success, and featured a local morning show hosted by Fort Wayne radio mainstay Ron Gregory. In 2003, however, owner Shine Broadcasting Services, LLC, announced it was looking to sell WSHI, and in January 2004, dropped the standards format in favor of mainstream
adult contemporary. The station was sold to Artistic Media Partners, Inc., that summer. Artistic Media tried to capitalize on the station's Top 40 heritage by changing the calls to
WDDB and reviving the "B-106" moniker. Once this proved unsuccessful, the station made another try as "Sunny 106.3", but with new calls
WSHY and an updating of the "Sunny" standards format to a mix of '60s and '70s
oldies and soft rock, which then evolved into straightforward oldies. In January 2007, Artistic Media Partners, Inc. agreed to sell WSHY and sister station
WBTU (93.3 FM) to entrepreneur Russ Oasis, for $3.8 million. When the deal was made, it flipped formats to
Regional Mexican as
106.3 "El Sol" (Sol is Spanish for "sun") under a local marketing agreement that was approved and took effect on March 6, 2007. The following month, Oasis flipped the station to a gold-based
Rhythmic Adult Contemporary format, branded as "Vibe 106.3", with an emphasis on
Disco and Classic
Dance from the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. The station also adopted the
WVBB call letters during this time. On September 27, 2008, Russ Oasis' Radio Group dropped the Rhythmic AC format in favor of
Variety Hits as "106.3 Joe FM". On September 2, 2009, WVBB changed their call letters to
WJOE to match the "Joe FM" branding. On October 14, 2010, WJOE again changed their format, this time to
news/talk, branded as "The Truth". On September 7, 2011, WJOE changed their call letters to
WHPP. 7 days later, on September 14 at 6:00 PM, the station dropped its news/talk format for a
mainstream urban format with a heavy emphasis on Hip-Hop, branded as "Clickhop.com". The first song on "Clickhop" was "
No Hands" by
Waka Flocka Flame. However, in 2013,
Mediabase placed the station on its
Rhythmic reporting panel due to sister station
WJFX having shifted to Top 40/CHR and having a playlist that falls more in line with other Rhythmics that concentrate on only Hip-Hop tracks and less time with conventional R&B tracks, similar to
WHHH/
Indianapolis. Throughout its tenure as "Clickhop.com", it used Listener Driven Radio (LDR) technology to allow listeners to vote on songs on their website in lieu of requests; because of this, the station presented itself as an
Internet radio station with an FM frequency. It also employed a few DJs. On April 3, 2013, at 6:00 PM, the station dropped the Rhythmic format ("Clickhop.com" continues on their website and mobile applications, though this was later discontinued), and flipped to
90's Hits, branded as "Rewind 106.3." In March 2014, Adams Radio Group entered an agreement to purchase Summit City Radio Group. Days later, Adams announced they would purchase Oasis Radio Group's stations. To meet ownership limits, Adams will retain
WNHT,
WGL and
WXKE, as well as acquiring Oasis Radio Group's
WJFX and
WBTU, while selling off WHPP to Fort Wayne Catholic Radio Group, Inc., and selling
WGL-FM to Calvary Radio Network.
WLYV and two translators (on 96.9 FM and 103.3 FM) will also be acquired by Adams. As a result of the sale to Fort Wayne Catholic Radio, WHPP flipped to Catholic talk programming as "Redeemer Radio" at Noon on June 2. The final song on "Rewind" was "
Try Again" by
Aaliyah. Redeemer Radio continued to be aired on WLYV until July 4, 2014, which transitioned into "1450 The Patriot" as a talk format. On September 2, 2014, WHPP changed its call sign to WRDF, to go with the "Redeemer Radio" branding. ==References==