The station
signed on in 1964 with the
call sign WYLO, which stood for "Way Low" (the station's position on the AM dial). WYLO ran a
country music format for many years before switching to
Christian programming. From 1995 to 2001, the WZER call sign was used, prior to briefly returning to WYLO and finally, WRRD. In the 1990s, WZER broadcast a mix of Contemporary Christian music and Ethnic programming on the weekend. In 1998, the station was purchased by Minneapolis-based Catholic Family Radio, which broadcast a Catholic Radio format on various radio stations across the country, many of these former
Radio AAHS stations. At this time, the Ethnic programming shifted to WEMP (Now
WSSP) and later
WJOI when that station switched to a Sports format. In 2000, Catholic Family Radio shut down and stations were put up for sale.
Salem Communications bought the station in October 2000, and switched initially to a simulcast
WYLL Chicago while using the WYLO call letters beginning in early 2001. In the fall of 2001, the call letters changed to WRRD and the station began operating its own Christian Talk, Preaching format branded as "The Word". Salem sold WRRD in early 2008 to Good Karma Broadcasting. Good Karma Broadcasting took over operation of the signal on February 7, 2008, moving the format of 1510 AM from that
daytimer-limited signal to the full-time 24/7 signal of WRRD. Formerly, ESPN Radio was heard on WAUK during the day, and
WMCS (1290) from 6pm-6am since January 1, 2005, under the branding ''Milwaukee's ESPN Radio – 1510 Days/1290 Nights''. On February 12, 2008, WAUK's call letters were switched to the 540 frequency, with the WRRD calls moving to 1510. The new "540 ESPN"
simulcasts continued with 1510 AM until May 5, 2008, when Good Karma converted the new WRRD to
ESPN Deportes Radio, a Spanish language sports talk format. WMCS's time brokering arrangement with WAUK ended on June 30, 2008, when the station reclaimed nighttime hours for the music and community talk format the station aired the rest of the day until a March 2013 format change to standards as WZTI. On November 1, 2018, following Good Karma Brands' acquisition of
WTMJ (620) and
WKTI (94.5) from the
E.W. Scripps Company, WKTI began simulcasting WAUK's programming as "94.5 ESPN FM". As of April 20, 2020, the station began to serve as a temporary over-the-air simulcast of
SiriusXM's
COVID-19 pandemic-specific discussion and news channel which is an extension of the service's
Doctor Radio channel; SiriusXM has made the channel available to any interested broadcaster without charge, and offers it free and clear on both their streaming and
satellite radio platforms without a required subscription. It returned to regular ESPN Radio programming by mid-July 2020 as American professional sports began to resume. In late August 2020, the former WRRD (and its FM translator in Milwaukee) began to simulcast WAUK after its current owner (which Good Karma sold the station to in 2017) decided to wind down its operations as a progressive talk outlet and sell the station's studio and transmitter facility. The station was previously owned by
Beaver Dam-based
Good Karma Brands (formerly Good Karma Broadcasting, LLC), headed by
Craig Karmazin, son of legendary radio executive
Mel Karmazin.
Sister station WKTI 94.5 FM carries mainly local sports talk and
WTMJ 620 AM/
103.3 FM airs a news/talk and sports format. On January 3, 2022, WAUK changed its format from sports to talk as "The Sha 101 FM". Effective June 30, 2022, Good Karma Brands sold WAUK and translator W266DR to Michael Crute's WAUK Radio, LLC for $650,000. Effective December 30, 2022, the station and the translator were flipped to Michael Crute and Sage Weil's Civic Media, Inc. for $775,668. On September 17, 2025, WAUK began simulcasting on FM translator W262CJ 100.3 FM Milwaukee. On October 8, 2025, WAUK debuted "All News All Morning," with host Dan Hanni. The show airs from 6-9am weekdays. The format is similar to programming on 1010 WINS New York City and WBBM-AM Chicago: A news "wheel," featuring a quick recap of local and state news, weather, sports and traffic. The 20-minute block then repeats, with updates and fresh stories. ==Previous sports programming==