WVOT

WVOT (1420 AM) was a radio station licensed to and located in Wilson, North Carolina, United States. The FCC assigned frequency was 1420 kHz. The station operated at 1,000 Watts non-directional by day, and 500 watts directional at night, largely on a north-facing axis.

WVOT
CityWilson, North Carolina
Frequency1420 kHz
Programming
FormatDefunct, was Urban contemporary gospel
Ownership
OwnerKingdom Expansion Corporation
History
First air date
June 1948
Last air date
December 19, 2017
(date of license cancellation)
Former call signs
WVOT (1948–1999)
WALQ (1999–2001)
Call sign meaning
Wilson's Voice Of Tobacco or Wilson's Voice Of Truth
Technical information
Facility ID8778
ClassB
Power1,000 Watts (day)
500 Watts (night)
Transmitter coordinates
35°44′08″N 77°53′02″W

Programming

The station's final format was urban contemporary gospel. Past formats have included talk, Carolina beach music, oldies, adult contemporary, contemporary hit radio, and block programming. The station's call letters originally stood for W-V(oice)-O(f)-T(obbacoland.)

History

WVOT signed on in June 1948.[1]

Career Communications bought WVOT in 1990.[2]

In 1997, Career Communications sold the station to Al Taylor's Taylor Group Broadcasting. During this time, the call letters were changed to WALQ.[3]

On November 9, 2017, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) informed WVOT that it had received a complaint on September 9 that the station had not operated since 2011 (broadcast stations are required to return to the air within a year of going silent), and ordered it to provide information about its operations since the expiration of its most recent special temporary authority authorization on August 29, 2014.[4] The station did not respond to the operational status inquiry, and its license was cancelled on December 19, 2017.[5]

WRDU-FM

In 1984, Century Communications sold WVOT & WXYY to Voyager Communications. The FM was moved to Raleigh and the call letters were changed to WRDU. A new tower site for WRDU (now WTKK) was built near Middlesex, North Carolina. The AM facility remained in Wilson.

References

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