City | Statesville, North Carolina |
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Branding | Real Country 92.9 |
Slogan | Decades of Country Music! |
Frequency | 550 AM and 92.9 FM |
First air date | 1955 |
Format | Classic Country |
Power | 500 watts (day) 53 watts (night) |
Class | D |
Facility ID | 63146 |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°47′43.00″N 80°51′17.00″W / 35.7952778°N 80.8547222°W |
Former callsigns | WDBM, WDRV, WIST |
Affiliations | MRN, PRN |
Owner | Statesville Family Radio Corporation |
Sister stations | WIST-FM, WTIX |
Website | WAME Online |
WAME (550 AM, "Country Legends 550") is a radio station broadcasting a classic country format. Licensed to Statesville, North Carolina, USA. The station is owned by Statesville Family Radio Corporation. WAME's programming can also be heard on FM at 92.9 MHz over translator W225BD, which operates at 19 watts.
The programming is currently a mix of locally produced programming and Dial Global's Classic Hit Country format.
The station on 550 AM in Statesville, North Carolina began in 1955 as WDBM, and operated only during daytime hours with licensed power of 500 watts. WDBM was founded by Walter A. Duke. In 1967, the Duke family started WDBM-FM at 96.9 FM, now known as WKKT, which initially was simulcast with WDBM. WDBM-FM continued to broadcast easy-listening music in the evenings after WDBM signed off.
In 1973, the Duke family sold the both stations to the Ferguson Family. The new owners separated the operations of the AM and FM, and the AM began broadcasting a country music format. The FM was given the calls WOOO and on-air was called "Triple-O 97".
In 1979, both WDBM and WOOO were sold to Metrolina Communications Corporation. WDBM became WDRV and switched to an adult contemporary format.
WDRV was sold to Statesville Family Communications, a subsidiary of GHB Broadcasting. The format was changed to Southern gospel music and religious teaching.
In 1990, the call letters became WAME and in 1994 they became WHYM.
In 1996, the station became WIST - "Station of the Stars" - an affiliate of the Music of Your Life adult standards network.
In 1997, GHB Broadcasting created a regional talk network called Total Radio to compete in the Charlotte, NC market against heritage station WBT. As part that effort, the call letters changed to WTLI when it joined the Total Radio simulcast. The attempt to compete against 50,000-watt WBT was not successful.