WTIK

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WTIK
City of license Durham, North Carolina
Broadcast area Durham
Branding La Mega 1310
Frequency 1310 kHz
First air date July 4, 1946
Format Regional Mexican
Power 5,000 watts day
1,000 watts night
Class B
Facility ID 53105
Transmitter coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Callsign meaning Where Tobacco Is King
Owner TBLC Holdings, LLC
(TBLC Durham Stations, LLC)
Sister stations WRJD
Website http://www.lameganc.com/

WTIK (1310 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Regional Mexican format. Licensed to Durham, North Carolina, USA, the station serves the Triangle area. The station is currently owned by Mahan Janbakhsh's TBLC Holdings, LLC, through licensee TBLC Durham Stations, LLC.[1][2]

History

On June 10, 1946, under Harmon Duncan, Durham's second radio station, WDUK, began broadcasting at 1310 AM with 1,000 watts, and studios on Corcoran Street downtown, and its transmitter site on Leon Street in the Glendale Heights neighborhood. On July 4, 1946, James Floyd Fletcher, son of Capitol Broadcasting Company founder A.J. Fletcher, started the city's third radio station, WTIK, at 730 AM with studios downtown and an antenna on Ellis Road. In 1950, the stations merged and took the letters WTIK and the 1310 dial position.

In 1956, Fletcher and Duncan sold WTIK to the Welch family's W & W Broadcasting of Salisbury, North Carolina, as they had moved on to found Durham's first television station, WTVD, channel 11.

An ABC Radio affiliate, WTIK used several different formats including MOR, rock and roll,[3] and later country, as one of the first stations in the state to embrace the format full-time.[4]

In 1964 WTIK added a third tower and increased power to 5000 watts. Also during that time, a vandal cut a guy wire, causing the tower to fall.[3]

In 1969, Buddy Poole, who had worked for Harry Welch Sr. at WSAT in Salisbury, moved to WTIK, another of Welch's stations. Poole's autograph party with Loretta Lynn and Faron Young attracted 3000 people. Poole became general manager in 1972 at age 26 and remained at WTIK for four more years.[4]

In 1993, with FM very popular and AM strugling, WTIK switched to the satellite-delivered Sports Entertainment Network and became the Triangle's first sports station. W & W was in the process of selling the station when it signed off but came back with contemporary Christian music during the day and positive country music at night.[3]

In 1997, "La Que Buena" (The Great One) added a second Spanish language alternative to Durham radio.[5] In 2004, "Mi Gente" (My People) became the first of two new names for WTIK; "La Rumba" followed in the summer of the same year. The station was owned by Blacksburg, Virginia based Baker Communications until 2004, when the station was sold to Davidson Media Group.[3]

In 2005, plans were announced for Spanish broadcaster Que Pasa to lease WTIK's air time for a contemporary Latin format to complement the regional Mexican moving from former sister station WDRU, 1030 AM, to WLLQ, WRTG and WGSB In the summer of 2005, the contemporary format debuted as "Que Pasa Mixx".[6] On April 1, 2006, WTIK's black gospel programming moved to new sister station, WRJD, 1410 AM, allowing WTIK to air 24-hour Spanish language programming.

On July 13, 2015, both WTIK and WRJD were sold to TBLC Media as part of a twelve-station deal with Davidson Media, which included stations in Charlotte, Greensboro, Richmond, Spartanburg, and Kansas City.[7] The sale, at a purchase price of $3.5 million, was consummated on November 5, 2015.

From late 2011 until December 2014, WTIK was also heard in southeastern North Carolina via WZKB, 94.3 FM, in Wallace.

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. La Raza Chicago, Inc - Mira quién habla…
  6. Triad radio stations getting new kind of Spanish format - The Business Journal of the Greater Triad Area:
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links