WVOK-FM

WVOK-FM (97.9 FM, "97-9 WVOK") is a radio station broadcasting a Hot Adult Contemporary music format. Licensed to Oxford, Alabama, it serves the Anniston-Oxford Metropolitan Area. It is owned and operated by Woodard Broadcasting Company, Inc.

WVOK-FM
CityOxford, Alabama
Broadcast areaAnniston-Oxford Metropolitan Area
Frequency97.9 FM (MHz)
Branding97-9 WVOK
Slogan"The Best of the 80's, 90's and Today!"
Programming
FormatHot Adult Contemporary
Ownership
OwnerWoodard Broadcasting Co.
Sister stationsWVOK-AM
History
First air dateFebruary 19, 1990
Technical information
ClassA
ERP510 watts
HAAT338 meters
Links
Website979wvok.com

Early history

WVOK was originally on AM 690

In 1977, WVOK-FM was launched in Birmingham, Alabama as an Album-Oriented Rock radio station called "K-99." The station broadcast from the 99.5 MHz frequency; it was originally a counterpart to WVOK-AM 690 , one of the more popular Top 40 stations of its era. WVOK-FM changed its call letters to WRKK in 1979; it kept its Rock format until 1983, when it became "K Country." Several format changes later, the station is now known in Birmingham as WZRR "Rock 99.5."

The WVOK call letters would not be heard on the FM dial again until the creation of a new radio station in Oxford, Alabama. Jimmy and Geraldine Woodard, owners of WEYY-FM in Talladega, Alabama, were granted a construction permit for the first commercial FM station licensed to Oxford. The station began broadcast in 1990 as WKFN "K98" on the 97.9 MHz frequency. In 1992, WKFN acquired the WVOK call letters; however, its "K98" nickname remained the same.

Recent history

On February 19, 1990,[1] K98 signed on as an Adult Contemporary station, playing music from the 1950s through the 1990s. At that time, WVOK was one of very few local stations to compete against the 100,000-watt Country music station WHMA of Anniston, known by listeners as "Alabama 100." November 6, 1996 Susquehanna Radio purchased Alabama 100 and moved it to College Park, Georgia in early 2001. After the move, Alabama 100 changed its call letters to WWWQ and became a Top-40 station serving the Atlanta radio market. As a result, WVOK saw an increase in their local Arbitron ratings.

Since K98 began broadcast in 1990, it has employed a number of various disk jockeys, including Rick Burgess from the syndicated "Rick and Bubba" radio program. Its radio format, however, has seen little change. Shortly after Clear Channel station WQEN ("103-7 the Q") relocated its transmitter from Springville, Alabama to Birmingham in early 2005, WVOK briefly changed its music format to Contemporary Hit Radio. They have, however, since returned to the lighter Hot AC format.

In early 2006, WVOK-FM began using its frequency and call letters often (instead of the "K98" nickname) as its station identifier. Its slogan is "The Best of the 80's, 90's and Today".

In early 2008, a new morning talk show called The Steve and Carl Show signed on.

Other facts

  • WVOK-FM is recognized as one of the only radio stations in Alabama to remain on the air during the "Storm of the Century" in 1993. WVOK received honors from the city of Oxford, former Alabama Governor Guy Hunt, and others for keeping the station on the air through the duration of the storm.
  • WVOK-FM is one of two stations in the Anniston/Gadsden market whose call letters were previously assigned to Top 40 stations in Birmingham. The other is WKXX.
  • There has been much speculation about the WVOK call sign meaning over the years. Although disk jockeys from the original WVOK-AM radio station sometimes referred to it as the Voice Of Kindness, the call letters themselves actually do not stand for anything.
gollark: Anyway, the latest issue was caused by the privileged execution mode, a trusted/signed program which downloaded code via HTTP, and a variation of a previous exploit on the SPUDNET process (patched by polychoron fixes) being used to fake HTTP responses to it.
gollark: ...
gollark: They can cause "too long without yielding" though, no?
gollark: And some bizarre combinations of features lead to issues.
gollark: This is likely because I have to expose a *lot* of mildly unsafe APIs to maintain CC compatibility though.

References

  1. Smith, Matt (February 8, 1990). "FM station will debut in Oxford". Anniston Star. pp. 13A, 16A. Retrieved October 9, 2019.

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