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|---|---|
| Broadcast area | |
| Frequency | 106.1MHz (HD Radio) |
| Branding | 106.1 FM Talk |
| Programming | |
| Format | Talk |
| Subchannels | HD2:Sports |
| Network | Fox News Radio |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WDCG,WNCB,WRDU,WDCG-HD2 | |
| History | |
First air date | March 1, 1961 (64 years ago) (1961-03-01) |
Former call signs |
|
Call sign meaning | "Talk" |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 73936 |
| Class | C1 |
| ERP | 27,500watts |
| HAAT | 489 meters (1,604 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°40′28.6″N78°31′39″W / 35.674611°N 78.52750°W /35.674611; -78.52750 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast |
|
| Website | 1061fmtalk.iheart.com foxsportsraleigh.iheart.com (HD2) |
WTKK (106.1FM "106.1 FM Talk") is a commercialradio station licensed toKnightdale, North Carolina, and serving theRaleigh-Durham market, also known as theResearch Triangle. WTKK airs atalk radio format and is owned and operated byiHeartMedia, Inc. Studios are located in Raleigh, while the transmitter resides inAuburn. In addition to a standardanalog transmission, WTKK broadcasts inHD Radio with twosubchannels and is available online viaiHeartRadio.
The station began as WVOT-FM inWilson, North Carolina on March 1, 1961.[2] It shared a studio and transmitter building on Herring Avenue in Wilson with its AMsister station,WVOT 1420 AM. That building burned in 1992. WVOT later operated from an old house on Jackson Street. In the early days, both WVOT AM and FM largelysimulcast aMOR, full service format until the duo was acquired by Century Communications in 1976. The FM was renamed WXYY and switched to anautomatedalbum rock format known as "Super Rock".
By 1980, WXYY had switched tocountry music but was still automated. In 1983, the stations were purchased byVoyager Communications. A new tower, which would allow a much better signal into Raleigh, was built west of Wilson inMiddlesex. New studios were set up in Raleigh.
In August 1984, WXYY signed off in Wilson and signed on from Raleigh as "WRDU 106". The station returned to the air on Labor Day weekend of 1984, playingthe Rolling Stones' "Start Me Up" as its first song. Many of the first on-air personalities migrated over from rival rock stationWQDR-FM, including Bob Walton, Gayle Rancer, Bob Robinson (who was the only original WRDU staffer still with the station when it went country in 2006) and Tom Guild (who was on the air the night of sign-on). WQDR-FM, after 11 years as a rock station, made the switch to country a few days after WRDU's debut.[3]
WRDU's early format wasAOR with somehot AC artists such asCyndi Lauper,Lionel Richie, andthe Pointer Sisters added to the mix, probably to soften the sound a bit in anticipation of a duel with crosstown powerhouseWRAL. But by the late 1980s, WRDU's hot AC tunes were officially all gone and the station, bolstered by high listenership for its "Reynolds & Silva" morning show, dominated the Triangle ratings. Arguably, the pinnacle of WRDU's success came in the early 1990s when it won theRolling Stone Magazine Reader's Poll as "best station of the year" for several straight years starting in 1989. Other airstaff members who worked at the station during the late 1980s and the early 1990s were Donna Reed (Nights); Eric Curry (News), Ron Phillips (Rock & Roll Classics), Tom Gongaware, Lizz Wall, and Paul Jackson.
TheTelecommunications Act of 1996 brought about many changes to radio, including WRDU. Purchased initially from Voyager Communications Inc. byHicks, Muse, Tate, & Furst,[4] HMW Communications ofAtlanta sold WRDU and WTRG to SFX Broadcasting for $36.8 million in a deal completed in mid-1996.[5] SFX was in turn acquired by Capstar Broadcasting,[6] which was itself taken over by Chancellor Media Corporation, renamed AMFM Inc.[7][8] When the dust settled in 1999, WRDU was owned byiHeartMedia (then known as Clear Channel Communications). Their Raleigh holdings also included sister stations WDCG, WTRG (now WRDU), and WRSN (now WNCB).
After the initial purchase of the station by SFX broadcasting, a decline in ratings began. WZZU, also a classic rock station, was brought into the fold when Prism Broadcasting Partners was purchased. With no need for two rock stations in the stable, WZZU was flipped to lite AC as Sunny 93.9 (WRSN). WRDU Program Director Tom Guild was moved to WTRG programming, while former WZZU Program Director Bob Edwards assumed those duties for WRDU. The Silva and the Blade morning show was replaced by theJohn Boy and Billysyndicated morning show.
On July 4, 2001, the station would shake-up again, flipping from classic rock to mainstream rock.
On October 6, 2006, at 4 p.m., after playing "Free Bird" byLynyrd Skynyrd, WRDU beganstunting with a clip of "Rooster" byAlice in Chains and redirecting listeners toWRVA-FM. At 5 p.m., Clear Channel changed the station's format back to country. The station then became known as "106.1 The Rooster", with "Today's Country and the Legends".[9][10] Syndicated duoJohn Boy and Billy returned to the Raleigh-Durham market to do mornings on the new station.[11]

WRDU general manager Dick Harlow announced on November 2, 2009, that WRDU would change toconservative talk radio in 2010, withRush Limbaugh,Glenn Beck andSean Hannity as featured shows. The station would feature Limbaugh's first name as its slogan, "Rush Radio".[12] On November 15, 2009, WRDU pulled the plug on its country format and switched to "106.1 RDU Christmas".[13] On January 1, 2010, the station became news/talk as "106.1 Rush Radio".
In 2011, co-ownedWPTI inGreensboro added WRDU's morning show.[14]
In April 2013, WRDU changed its letters to WTKK and dropped the "Rush Radio" brand.[15]
WTKK served for many years as the FM flagship of theTar Heel Sports Network, which broadcasts football and basketball games involving theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Tar Heels. This arrangement came into question followingcomments made by Rush Limbaugh regarding Sandra Fluke, a law student from Georgetown University. From then on,Learfield (who produced UNC's sports programming) told the station it could no longer promote the school or radio network duringRush, while any promos orstation identifications promotingRush were likewise terminated during THSN coverage, eventually hastening the end of the "Rush Radio" brand in the market.[16][17] The arrangement ended upon Limbaugh's death in 2021 and was rendered moot with the move of the THSN in the Triangle toWPTF the same year.
WTKK also broadcastsCarolina MudcatsMinor League Baseball games on itsHD2 channel, which is part of an expanded broadcast sports package.[18]
On August 5, 2024, WTKK began carryingFox Sports Radio programming on its HD2 subchannel, branded as "Fox Sports 106.1 HD2".[19]
WTKK's lone local program is a morning show hosted by K.C. O'Dea, which is simulcast withWPTI inGreensboro.[20] Syndicated programming comprises the rest of the weekday schedule:The Glenn Beck Radio Program,The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show,The Sean Hannity Show,The Ramsey Show,The Jesse Kelly Show andCoast to Coast AM.[21]