WVOT

WVOT
City Wilson, North Carolina
Frequency 1420 kHz
First air date June 1948
Last air date December 19, 2017
(date of license cancellation)
Format Defunct, was Urban contemporary gospel
Power 1,000 Watts (day)
500 Watts (night)
Class B
Facility ID 8778
Transmitter coordinates 35°44′08″N 77°53′02″W / 35.73556°N 77.88389°W / 35.73556; -77.88389Coordinates: 35°44′08″N 77°53′02″W / 35.73556°N 77.88389°W / 35.73556; -77.88389
Callsign meaning Wilson's Voice Of Tobacco or Wilson's Voice Of Truth
Former callsigns WVOT (1948–1999)
WALQ (1999–2001)
Owner Kingdom Expansion Corporation

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.

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] The original studio/transmitter building was located across from the Wilson city operation center on East Herring Avenue. The small brick and frame building held the business office, advertising office, production studio, news room, "on-air" control-room/studio, and transmitter. Though space was limited and spartan, the studio provided a venue for interviewing a variety of celebrities, including Tiny Tim.

Career Communications bought WVOT in 1990.[2]

WVOT switched to a Beach Music format in 1992, later switching to news/talk.

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]

In 1999, Gerald Winborne, owner of the Jackson Street studio property, donated the house and land to Christ Temple of Praise Church.

In 2001, Taylor Group Broadcasting sold the station to Kingdom Expansion Corp. to be operated by Christ Temple of Praise Church. The call letters were later changed back to WVOT.

In 2003, Announcer Frederick Mason won $1,000 in back wages after the State Department of Labor ruled he wasn't paid minimum wage.

WVOT was off the air for several months in 2008 after losing the lease to the Herring Avenue transmitter site. In 2009 engineers erected a temporary wire antenna at the Jackson Street studio to get the station back on the air.

WVOT is again transmitting from the Herring Avenue tower site. The studios are located on Ward Boulevard in Wilson near Ralph L. Fike High School.

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]

The Fire

During the 1980s and early 1990s, the station signed off the air each night at midnight. The duties of the last announcer of the evening included recording the weather forecast on a 24-hour answering machine "The WVOT 24-Hour Weather Center" and locking up the station for the five hours it would be unoccupied before the morning airstaff arrived.

In one corner of the control room was a pre-internet teleprinter terminal providing news wire service. Teleprinters generated many yards of hardcopy on paper throughout the day. The night announcer was responsible for clearing the wire service area of the accumulated teleprinter paper at the end of the broadcast day. In 1992 an announcer emptied an ash tray from the broadcast control room into the same trash can as the accumulated paper. The resulting blaze destroyed the building.

After several months of operating in temporary buildings at the transmitter site following the fire, the studios were moved to an historic house on Jackson Street in downtown Wilson. A new transmitter building was erected on the original Herring Avenue tower site.

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

  1. Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 1999 (PDF). 1999. p. D-332. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
  2. "Magic 95.9FM, THE Music Lovers Station, Plymouth, NC". Retrieved 2010-06-16.
  3. http://archive.wilsontimes.com/archive_detail.php?archiveFile=1997/November/27/LocalNews/54901o.xml&start=0&numPer=20&keyword=wvot&sectionSearch=&begindate=1%2F1%2F1987&enddate=12%2F30%2F2012&authorSearch=&IncludeStories=1&pubsection=&page=&IncludePages=1&IncludeImages=1&mode=allwords&archive_pubname=Wilson+Daily+Times%0A%09%09%09
  4. Doyle, Peter H. (November 9, 2017). "In re: WVOT(AM), Wilson, NC Facility ID No. 8778 Operational Status Inquiry" (PDF). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
  5. "Broadcast Actions" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. December 22, 2017. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
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