1940s The station that became WVEE first signed on the air on July 1, 1948. Its original call sign was WAGA-FM, simulcasting a
country music radio format with WAGA (590 AM, now
WDWD). They were owned by
Storer Broadcasting, a company that owned several top stations in large American cities.
1950s and 1960s In 1959, WAGA-AM-FM were acquired by
Plough Broadcasting, a
subsidiary of a
pharmaceutical company that decided to invest in radio stations. Their call letters were switched to WPLO and WPLO-FM, and the two stations continued to simulcast WPLO's successful country programming. In the late 1960s, the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) began requiring AM stations in larger cities to end full-time simulcasts, promoting new programming on FM stations. WPLO had
Georgia State University students program and host a
free form "underground" format, giving the students academic credit instead of pay. The arrangement allowed Plough to have an inexpensive FM presence in the years before FM came to dominate the radio spectrum. It created enough interest among the student body that the
Georgia Board of Regents obtained a
construction permit and license for its own station at the university,
WRAS-FM. Plough management believed the music programmed by the Georgia State students could become a profitable commercial format if presented professionally. By 1969, WPLO-FM was billing itself as "Atlanta's Alternative High", and described its 103.3 frequency as "103-and-a-third". Program directors in this
progressive rock era included Ed Shane, Steve Hosford, and Chris Morgan.
1970s In 1974, as more listeners were switching from AM to FM for music listening, Plough-Shearing changed WPLO-FM's format. Keeping the same call letters, WPLO-FM flipped to country music to build on the AM station's popularity. The AM station continued to have more personality, with frequent news and weather updates, while the FM station went in a more-music, limited DJ chatter direction. In October 1976, Schering-Plough recognized Atlanta's growing middle-class
African-American market by changing WPLO-FM to
urban contemporary under the "V-103"
moniker and new call sign WVEE. It briefly aired a
disco music format in 1976. When disco fever cooled, WVEE-FM returned to the urban contemporary, and became one of the Atlanta radio market's top stations under the leadership of program director Scotty Andrews. As the first urban station on the FM dial in Metro Atlanta, the "V-103" brand eventually saw other stations around the U.S. follow its formula, including
Baltimore sister station WXYV, also known as "V-103", and a
Chicago "V-103" (
WVAZ, now owned by
iHeartMedia).
1980s-1990s In the early 1980s, DKM Broadcasting Corporation purchased WVEE-FM and
WAOK. On January 1, 1988, WVEE-FM was sold, along with other DKM-owned properties in Baltimore,
Denver,
Springfield,
Lincoln,
Akron,
Dayton, and
Dallas, for $200 million to The Summit Communications Group, Inc. In March 1995, Summit sold its interests in WVEE FM and WAOK AM to Granum Communications, Inc., owned by Herbert W. McCord, Peter Ferrara, and Michael Weinstein. In March 1996, Granum Communications sold both stations to
Infinity Broadcasting, which was later folded into
CBS Radio. Infinity already owned
WZGC, which it owned since 1992, that made the three stations a trio-poly.
2000s In 2000,
V-103, after many years of operating as an urban contemporary station that only played
R&B and
classic soul throughout the day and only played
hip hop music during early evening hours, added hip-hop music full-time to compete with
WHTA ("Hot 97.5", now "Hot 107.9") and
WALR-FM (
Kiss 104.7, now
Kiss 104.1), and to appeal more to the 18-34
demographic alongside the original 25-54 demo. With the gain of more competition, WVEE was one of three adult urban stations between 1998 and 2000 when
WAMJ (
Majic 107.5) took to the air, although WVEE never called itself an urban AC station. In 2003,
V-103 changed its longtime station
slogan from ''The People's Station
to Atlanta's BIG Station
to signify its dominance of Atlanta urban radio. WVEE-FM was often #1 or #2 in the Arbitron ratings, along with WSB. In 2008, WVEE-FM reverted to the previous slogan The People's Station'' to signify its commitment to the African-American community. Since autumn 2006, WVEE had aired an
HD Radio digital subchannel for playing
urban adult contemporary (specifically
neo-soul) music, with no
branding other than "V-103 HD-2". On February 28, 2020, WVEE-HD2 changed their format to international hits, branded as "V-103 International". The HD3 channel is a
simulcast of
sister station WAOK. On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with
Entercom. The merger was approved on November 9, and was consummated on the 17th. ==Programming==