Tag Archives: all i want for christmas is you

All-Christmas radio stations finally start airing

Update: Nov. 18: Pittsburgh’s 94.5 3WS and Wish 99.7 are finally playing nonstop Christmas music!


Update: Nov. 12:

It’s beginning to sound a lot like Christmas…

Dozens of radio stations across the country are now playing Christmas music.

So far, Pittsburgh still does not have an all-Christmas channel. Historically, 94.5 3WS and Wish 99.7 delay their all-Christmas formats until mid-November — despite many stations across the county starting in early November.

But from coast to coast, you can find Christmas music on the radio.

And if you’re looking for streaming or satellite radio holiday tunes, you’re in luck.

There are 12 Christmas music stations available on iHeartRadio’s streaming service — country, classics, jazz, religious, R&B, plus a station hosted by Santa.

And it looks like Sirius/XM has 20 channels, including the popular Hallmark Channel Radio.


It’s happened! There are finally some all-Christmas radio stations in America.

Cumulus Media’s Lite Rock 100.7 in Shreveport, Louisiana, moved to an all-Christmas format at 9 p.m. Oct. 28, RadioInsight.com reports. The station’s first song was “All I Want For Christmas” by Mariah Carey.

In South Carolina, Audacy’s Magic 98.9 flipped at 5 a.m. Nov. 1, according to WYFF.

Radio Insight says the Shreveport flip on Oct. 28 is the latest all-Christmas flip since 2018, when WTRV in Grand Rapids, Michigan, flipped on Oct. 30.

Who will be next? Looking at you, Z104 in Youngstown. 👀

Above update posted Nov. 1.


Previous story published Oct. 22, 2022:

This appears to be the first year in quite a few years where no radio station in the country has flipped to Christmas yet.

Last year, Youngstown, Ohio, area radio listeners had Christmas music beginning Oct. 1, with WWIZ 103.9 Z104 turning to Christmas 104. The station also had October debuts in 2020 and 2019. So far in 2022, that has not happened.

All across the country, radio stations make a temporary flip to holiday tunes.

Western Pennsylvanians likely know 94.5 3WS and Wish 99.7 in Pittsburgh and Classy 100 in Erie all flip in November. Will that tradition continue in 2022?

While October might seem early for a radio station to go all-Christmas, radio companies (the few that exist these days) sometimes use Christmas music outside of the holiday season (or even during the holidays) as part of a marketing effort when they’re looking to launch a totally new station. It’s called “stunting.”

Of course, many stations change to an all-Christmas format in November and December and then go back to regular programming in January.

There seems to be one possible format shakeup in the works as iHeartMedia purchased Santa1039.com, which redirects to 103.9 Kiss in Sarasota, Florida.

It remains to be seen if the radio station will change formats completely or, at this point, when it might flip to all-Christmas.

Speaking of iHeartMedia, though. If you’re looking for a Christmas music fix (and who isn’t?), get the iHeartRadio app and play iHeart Christmas or one of the many other holiday season stations available.

Or, ask your Google Home device (and probably Alexa) to “play iHeart Christmas on iHeartRadio” and BAM jingle bells all the time.

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Image by David Mark from Pixabay

Mariah Carey sued over popular ‘All I Want For Christmas Is You’ song

It took 28 years, but a songwriter who wrote a Christmas song with the same title five years before Mariah Carey’s popular “All I Want For Christmas Is You” filed a $20 million lawsuit Friday alleging copyright infringement.

Andy Stone wrote, recorded and released a song in 1989 called “All I Want for Christmas Is You” under the stage name Vince Vance (the group is called Vince Vance and the Valiants).

That song — which is well-known in the holiday genre — was released five years before Carey’s song with the same title.

The two songs share nearly nothing else except titles and being filed to the holiday music genre.

Stone alleges in his lawsuit that Carey and co-writer Walter Afanasieff created a “derivative” version of his song without seeking permission.

The suit lists Afanasieff and Sony Music as co-defendants.

Carey’s version is wildly popular and has become the unofficial (official?) holiday season kickoff anthem, with Carey often publicizing the song in a series of social media posts on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1.

Carey’s song has been a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, has streamed over 1 billion times on Spotify and has more than 1 billion views on YouTube — not to mention that it’s probably played every minute on some radio station across America between Nov. 1 and Jan. 1. The song title was the name of a 2017 Hallmark Channel Christmas movie that featured Carey and her song.

A lawyer specializing in music and intellectual property rights told Deadline that Stone’s lawsuit faces an uphill battle.

“Song titles aren’t entitled to copyright protection,” lawyer Pamela Koslyn told Deadline. “That’s why there are 177 works using the same title. An even more popular title is ‘My Baby,’ which has 4,860 works registered with the Copyright Office. And that doesn’t even count ‘common law’ (unregistered) works using the same title.”

Despite all of that, and that the song is 29 years old, Stone’s lawyers did not reach out to Carey’s lawyers until … April 2021. A subsequent cease and desist was ignored.

Stone filed the lawsuit in New Orleans because, according to Rolling Stone, the songwriter in April 2022 purchased a copy of Carey’s wildly popular 1994 “Merry Christmas” album. The album features Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You.”

Stone is seeking “profits, gains and advantages derived by the Defendants as a result of willful copyright infringement” to the tune of at least $20 million.

Stone’s song has landed on Billboard’s Hot Country Singles & Tracks six times, peaking at No. 31 in 1999-2000. It peaked at No. 23 on Billboard’s Hot 100 Recurrent Airplay in 2002.

Kelly Clarkson revived Stone’s song in 2020 as a standalone single, later adding it to her 2021 “When Christmas Comes Around…” album.

Watch/listen to the songs below!