I was just referring to FM, and only the commercial band (WABE would be second oldest overall if you included the noncom band, and WREK would also be older than WZGC for one).
You are right--on AM, WGST is second oldest behind WSB. But what would be third? WPLO (not the same station, I know, and not continuously used either)? WQXI? WGKA (also not the same station, but in continuous use)? WFOM? WAOK? WYZE?
Another Top 40 AM: the short-lived WBAD 1570.
AM (Continuous) Call Letter History (Partial List - oldest stations)
1922 – WSB
1925 – WGST (from WGM (1922) > WBBF)
1941 – WGGA (Gainesville)
1946 – WFOM (Marietta)
1947 – WQXI
1949 – WDUN (Gainesville), WTJH – (East Point - Are they still on the air?)
1954 – WAOK (from WRBI (1928)(Tifton) > WJTL (Oglethorpe Univ., N. Atlanta) > WATL)
1955 – WGKA
1956 – WYZE
1958 – WPLO* (from WAGA (1938))
*(Changed to WKHS/590 in 1986. WPLO started again on 610 in 1990.)
WBAD/1570 started as WCPX in 1959, then WEAS, them WEAD, then WAIA, then WBAD (1967), then WSSA (1970), then WIGO (2007-present). WIGO was on 1340 and replaced WAKE in 1965. The 1340 history was WBGE > WAKE > WIGO > WALR > WIFN.
(WIGO were not "continuous" calls.)
WIGO was R&B/Urban from the start and gave WAOK good competition. Bob McKee had moved from WAKE to WAOK, and Tommy Goodwin ("TG") moved from WYNX to WIGO when it started up. Both held the morning shifts, so for awhile, the two top R&B/Urban stations in Atlanta had white guys in the morning drive. Nobody cared because they both sounded great. Radio was fun in ATL.
Last edited: