@danny: Actually WDOK's slogan more than just rhymed... it just rolled off the tongue sounding just like said body part(s).
@clevefan: The demise of WLTF is an interesting story. They had a strong head-to-head competitor in WMJI but managed to come out on top for most of the 5 or so years they competed. They popped the champagne corks when they "drove Majic out of the format" but failed to realize that the war was just beginning. While WMJI flipped to oldies, they were still competing for pretty much the same listeners. Meanwhile WDOK started chipping away at the upper demos, and then WQAL at the lowers. They were caught in the classic squeeze play. Had WLTF stayed true to the principles that made them successful: execution, research, and promotion they probably would have stayed on top. During the early 90's there was an air of arrogance and complacency within the upper management at Booth. At the time they should have doubled down on those things, they fired the consultant (who ended up at WDOK) and severely cut the marketing budget. They first allowed morning show sidekick and producer Kenny Campbell go to Baltimore, and then they allowed Trapper to go to WDOK. They announced the hire of Matt Patrick to do mornings but apparently nobody asked about his non-compete with WKDD. Matt ended up staing at KDD until a year or two ago. They hired the morning team of Corey and Jay from Richmond (and later added Desiray). The PD, Dave Popovich quit and they hired the PD away from WQAL who supposedly sent the new morning show in a different direction every other week. At the same time the music was all over the place. Were they lite rock? Where they Hot AC. The answer changed constantly. There were rampant rumors that the station was going to go to the darling format du-jour, ARROW (All Rock-n-Roll Oldies). Booth was absorbed into what became Secret Communications. They eventually hired Randy James from WRQX in Washington. In 1996 a sale of all the Secret properties to SFX was announced, but Cleveland (and Pittsburgh, I think) were backed out of the deal before it closed, so the station was in limbo for a better part of a year, first waiting for the SFX deal to close, then waiting to see who the NEXT buyer would be. Jacor bought the station in 1997 and the re-branding to Mix, overseen by James, happened that fall.
Mix got off to a good start, but James apparently didn't feel the love from management and moved on. After James left, the station drifted all over the musical spectrum while calling themselves Hot AC. Early in 2011 they flipped it gain to "The Lake" with it's "play anything" format.