WOKN was
urban contemporary before picking up the WEQR letters and
adult contemporaryformat of what was then
WWPL in 1990. WEQR simulcast
WEQQ in
Pinetops with a
hot adult contemporary format and the name "The Double Q".
[2]
Beasley Broadcast Group sold WEQR to Curtis Media in the 1996. Curtis Media completed construction of a new tower in Johnston County in 2009 on Little Creek Church Road in Clayton.
[3]
WEQQ became WKTC in 1998 and WEQR continued with the format until 2001, when the station began simulcasting WKXU; the
country music format and WKIX letters moved from 96.9 FM.
[1][2][4] Branding during this time included Kix 102.3
[and Country 102.
The station swapped call letters with
97.7 FM in
Kinston in 2006, becoming WWNF.
[1][4] The country music format also moved to 97.7 FM, and on February 1, 2007,[
citation needed] WWNF began to simulcast
Raleigh oldies station
WWMY.
[3]
WWNF assumed the WKIX call letters once again late in 2008.
[1]
In early 2010, WKIX and WWMY swapped call letters
[1][7] and 102.3 FM planned to transmit a new format from a new tower site on Little Creek Church Road near
Clayton in
Johnston County.
WWMY ended its simulcast with WKIX-FM on October 23, 2010 and began
stunting with future simulcast partner WKXU, which also moved to a new transmitter location, as part of a change in city of license from Goldsboro to
Smithfield. On October 27, WWMY became WWPL,
[1] and WKXU became
WPLW. On October 31, at 5PM, the stunting ended and both stations debuted their new rhythmic contemporary format as "Pulse 102".
[8] The first song played was "
I Like It" by
Enrique Iglesias ft.
Pitbull. The format is described as "sort of the hip-hop and R&B that has crossed over into Top 40."
[9] Its primary target audience was women aged 25 to 34, and the station was expected to compete with
Radio One station
K 97.5 and
Clear Channel's G105 and
93.9 Kiss FM, who ironically transitioned from Rhythmic AC to Rhythmic Top 40 after Pulse 102 signed on. The stations debuted playing 10,000 songs in a row and promised fewer commercials than other stations. Artists include
Lady Gaga,
Enrique Iglesias and
Ke$ha.
[10] By October
2011, WPLW & WWPL were both added to the
Mediabase contemporary hit radio panel.
In January 2014, Triangle Marketing Associates, Inc. filed an application with the FCC to purchase WWPL from Curtis Media Group's New Age Communications, Inc. On September 3, 2014, the Pulse format moved from WWPL to sister station
WBZJ. On September 12, 2014 WWPL changed their call letters to WFNL-FM as the station ended its Pulse FM simulcast and began
stuntingwith liners redirecting Pulse listeners to 96.9 and 102.5. At that time, the WWPL calls moved to 96.9. On September 26, 2014 WFNL-FM ended stunting and launched a
bluegrass format, branded as "Bluegrass 102.3".
[11] The format launch came days before Raleigh hosted the
International Bluegrass Music Associationconvention and music festival, better known as World of Bluegrass 2014.
[12] The FCC approved the sale of WFNL to Triangle Marketing Associates in October, 2014. Though intended to be a temporary placeholder, the bluegrass format continued through November 30, 2014, when Triangle Marketing Associates, Inc. closed on its acquisition of the station.
[13][14] Curtis sold the station to avoid running afoul of FCC ownership limits when Curtis acquired
WKIX-FM.
[15]
On December 1, 2014, WFNL-FM went silent as Triangle Marketing Associates, Inc began the relocation of station studios from the Curtis Media studios in Raleigh to Johnston County.
[13]New owner Triangle Marketing Associates planned to debut a format intended to serve
Johnston County.
[16]
On January 1, 2015, "Country Superstars 102.3" made its debut. On January 23, 2015, WFNL-FM changed their call letters to WKJO, intended to represent Wake & Johnston Counties. The station's transmitter is located 7 miles from Wake County.
In September 2022, the station was once again purchased by Curtis Media Group from Triangle Marketing Associates for $2,080,000. The purchase was made possible by the fact that
WWPL Goldsboro is no longer counted towards the FCC's ownership caps for the Raleigh-Durham market.
[15]