The 1410 spot on the dial was first heard from Concord in 1942. WEGO was owned by Wayne M. Nelson, who constructed the station's studios along Highway 29 (now Concord Parkway), just west of the city. In 1953, the city's newspaper,
The Concord Tribune (now
Independent-Tribune) purchased the station. Over the next few years, WEGO began airing local newscasts, in addition to the
Associated Press wire stories and the
T-N News Network. In 1960, The Tribune sold WEGO to the Suburban Radio Group of
Belmont, North Carolina, which began the station's greatest period of growth and popularity. In 1961, WEGO-FM was launched, and a few years later, General Manager Jim Keel renamed it
WPEG, the call sign of a newly acquired SRG station in Winston-Salem. Keel encouraged a more contemporary presentation on WEGO. Announcer Gene Hinson launched "The Show Without a Name" and gained a sizeable teen audience every afternoon. Other popular announcers on the station during this period included
Bob Raiford, Jack Becknell, Chief Engineer Ken Kennedy and Richard Irwin. The station dropped the last vestiges of
block programming, and began airing a full-time "Easy
Top-40" format. Popular announcers on the station in these years included Jay Driggers, John Stiles, Bill Biggerstaff, Gary Walker and Dick Reid Norwood. Broadcaster Charlie Hicks was a program host and general manager of the station from 1969-80. Throughout the 1970s, WEGO went through a succession of formats as competition tightened in the market. By 1980, the station was automated through most of its daytime broadcasting hours, and alternated format choices over those years between country and oldies. Station managers included Jim Mintzer and Mark Herman. The "Mark In The Morning" show became a popular morning drive staple on WEGO in the mid-1980s. Mark Herman alternated music with funny bits/voices coupled with news reports and contests. With improved profitability, The Suburban Radio Group began courting a purchaser for the station. In 1985, that purchaser was found in former station Manager Charlie Hicks. Soon after his purchase of WEGO, the station's format changed to
oldies. While the transmitter remained at the Highway 29 location, Hicks moved the studios of the station to 70 Cabarrus Avenue West, three blocks from downtown Concord. It was the first studio move in the 49-year history of the station. After owning WEGO for eight years, and purchasing
WABZ-FM in
Albemarle, Hicks sold the two stations back to Suburban in 1993. Suburban ran WEGO until its sale to GHB Broadcasting in 2003. For several years ending in 2008, WEGO aired the "
Stardust"
adult standards format from
ABC Radio, which later called itself "Timeless" and emphasized soft oldies. The Morning Announcer was Bob Brown and news was covered by Mark Plemmons. In late November, 2008, GHB announced that the WEGO studios were being consolidated with GHB's other broadcast properties in a studio complex on North Tryon Street in
Charlotte. The format changed back to adult standards as WEGO began simulcasting Rock Hill, South Carolina station
WAVO. WEGO closed its Concord studio and ended all of the station's local programming, except church services, which could no longer be aired live. "The Bob and Mark Show" and "
The Trading Post," plus other community-oriented programming, including sports, re-appeared on the Radio Free Cabarrus web site. Mark Plemmons served as general manager, news director and sports director.
Morning in America with
Bill Bennett became the morning show for the combined on-air stations, and
SRN News was added. WEGO changed its call sign to WTIX at the end of 2009, in a call sign shift designed to protect GHB Broadcasting‘s historical New Orleans base call sign. Following extensive damage from
Hurricane Katrina which forced the original
WTIX off the air, there was concern that the New-Orleans station would not return to the air in time air to keep the call sign within the company without moving it to another station. Early in 2010, WAVO/WTIX added two
sports talk programs. Bryce Johnson began hosting "Sports Yapp" at 9 A.M. weekdays in February. On April 5 the show began airing an hour earlier. Also, on April 3, Chris Pardo, who moved to
York County, South Carolina in 2008, began hosting "
New York Sports Talk", two hours long starting at noon on both Saturday and Sunday. Pardo, the son of announcer
Don Pardo, said that
WFNZ rarely offered news about New York sports. He found that others from New York wished there was more coverage of their teams. Pardo publicized the show on web sites and by handing out information to people wearing team apparel. Pardo has since come to realize he is no longer in New York. On July 4, 2010, WAVO/WTIX added "Crank and Case", an
automobile advice program similar to
Car Talk, hosted by
mechanics Chuck Sperry and Stick Case Roneis. WTIX continued to broadcast from the same antenna on U.S. 29 until November 2011. During part of that month, WTIX went off the air during a switch to a new tower expected to improve the station's signal. When WTIX came back March 4, 2012, it was called "Country Legends 1410 WTIX". The studios are located off Church Street in Concord. A local morning show began April 2, hosted by Mac McCoy, who once did traffic reports on
WBT in
Charlotte under the monicker of Jeff Pilot and as
Magic 96.1's Sky King. the return to local programming in Concord proved unsuccessful, because in 2014, WTIX began simulcasting
WHVN "Heaven Radio". In December 2015, it was announced that
Catawba College Foundation and 2B Productions would be buying WTIX. WTIX began simulcasting the
oldies format of
WSAT in
Salisbury, with local news, sports and information for an area that will also include Concord and Kannapolis. 2B Productions changed its name to Rowan-Cabarrus Radio, and Catawba students will train for journalism and communications careers on its three stations. The purchase, at a price of $65,000, was consummated on January 11, 2016. In 2016, WTIX added a translator W252DI at 98.3 FM and the station was called "Memories 98.3". At the end of 2022, the
Independent Tribune said
EMF had purchased W252DI to broadcast
Air1, and the future of WEGO was uncertain but it was described as "
dead on the air". 2B Productions surrendered WEGO's license to the
Federal Communications Commission on December 21, 2023, and it was cancelled the same day. ==References==