LG / entertainment / WAFJ+
REVIEW
WAFJ+ brings Augusta's Christian Hits station to the LG TV.
Radio Training Network's webOS port of WAFJ 88.3 FM — the Augusta GA / Aiken SC Christian-radio outlet branded 'Today's Best Christian Hits' — runs as a single-station audio app on the living-room TV.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
WAFJ+ is the LG webOS port of a single FM signal — WAFJ 88.3 in Augusta, Georgia, the Radio Training Network’s “Today’s Best Christian Hits” station serving the Augusta-Aiken metro and the surrounding upstate corridor. The app is exactly what its name implies. It is not a Christian-music streaming service, not a sermon library, not a network of stations. It is one local radio station, broadcast to the living-room TV.
That framing matters for how the app should be read. Judged as a general-purpose Christian-music app, WAFJ+ is thin. Judged as a TV-side companion for households already inside the WAFJ signal area, it is a small, useful thing — the same station the family hears in the car or the kitchen, now on the TV without anyone having to dig out a phone.
The Radio Training Network has shipped this kind of station app across multiple platforms, and the webOS build sits in the middle of that lineup. Stream stability is solid; the on-screen surface is minimal. For Augusta-area listeners, that tradeoff lands fine. For anyone outside the broadcast footprint who stumbled on the app while browsing the LG Content Store, the recommendation is straightforward — a broader Christian-music service will serve better.
WAFJ+ on webOS is a single-station Christian-radio stream, aimed squarely at the Augusta-Aiken faithful who already know the call sign.
FEATURES
WAFJ+ is the LG webOS client for WAFJ 88.3 FM, the Radio Training Network's contemporary-Christian station serving Augusta, Georgia and Aiken, South Carolina under the "Today's Best Christian Hits" branding. The app is a single-stream audio player: launch it on a webOS TV and the live FM signal plays through the TV speakers or whatever audio setup the set is feeding.
The interface is built around the station's on-air programming rather than an on-demand library. Listeners get the live stream, station identification, and the standard now-playing surface that radio-station TV apps tend to ship with. There is no podcast back catalogue, no sermon archive, no separate worship-music sub-station.
Free, with no in-app purchases reported on the LG store listing. The audio routes through whatever output the TV is set to — useful for kitchen-adjacent TVs running as a stationary radio when the screen would otherwise be off.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The app does the one thing a station app needs to do — it puts WAFJ's live signal on the TV without asking the listener to fish out a phone or a separate radio. For households inside the Augusta-Aiken signal area that already tune in by car or kitchen radio, having the same station one click away on the living-room set is a genuine convenience.
The Radio Training Network's underlying stream is reliable, and the LG implementation inherits that stability. Audio-only TV apps tend to fail at the basics — buffering, reconnect-after-sleep, volume scaling — and WAFJ+ handles those without drama.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
This is a single-station app for a single market. Outside the Augusta-Aiken metro and the diaspora of listeners who grew up with the call sign, the appeal is narrow. There is no broader Christian-music catalogue, no companion sermon library, no integration with the station's social or podcast feeds.
The webOS-specific surface is thin. No Magic Remote-driven program guide, no visual now-playing art beyond the basics, no recently-played history that a listener could scroll back through. A station app that lives on a TV could do more with the screen real estate than this one currently does.
CONCLUSION
WAFJ+ is the right install for listeners in the WAFJ broadcast footprint who want the station available on their LG TV. For everyone else, generic Christian-radio aggregators or a streaming service's Christian-hits playlist will serve better. Watch for whether the Radio Training Network adds a program archive — that's the one feature that would broaden the app's reach beyond the Augusta-Aiken signal area.