WODT

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WODT
WODT BIN 1280 logo.webp
CityNew Orleans, Louisiana
Broadcast areaNew Orleans metropolitan area
Frequency1280 kHz
BrandingNew Orleans' BIN 1280
Programming
FormatBlack-oriented news
AffiliationsBlack Information Network
Ownership
OwneriHeartMedia, Inc.
(iHM Licenses, LLC)
KVDU, WNOE-FM, WQUE-FM, WRNO-FM, WYLD, WYLD-FM
History
First air date
July 23, 1923 (as WCBE)
Former call signs
WCBE (1923–1928)
WDSU (1928–1972)
WGSO (1972–1985)
WMKJ (1985–1987)
WQUE (1987–1995)
Call sign meaning
Who Dat? (New Orleans Saints chant)
Technical information
Facility ID11947
ClassB
Power5,000 watts unlimited
Transmitter coordinates
29°53′43″N 90°00′16″W / 29.89528°N 90.00444°W / 29.89528; -90.00444Coordinates: 29°53′43″N 90°00′16″W / 29.89528°N 90.00444°W / 29.89528; -90.00444
Translator(s)96.7 K244FX (New Orleans)
Repeater(s)101.1 WNOE-HD2 (New Orleans)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteneworleans.binnews.com

WODT (1280 AM) is an all-news radio station based in New Orleans, Louisiana, an affiliate of the Black Information Network. The iHeartMedia, Inc. station broadcasts with 5,000 watts full-time. Its transmitter is located in New Orleans' Algiers district, and its studios are located downtown.

History[]

AM 1280 first signed on in 1923 as WCBE, owned by Joseph Uhalt and based in his New Orleans backyard. In 1928, he moved the station to the DeSoto Hotel (now the Le Pavillon Hotel) in downtown New Orleans and changed the calls to WDSU. For many years, it was a middle-of-the-road formatted station. In 1948, it spawned Louisiana's first television station, WDSU-TV. A year later, it added an FM station, now WQUE. The radio stations were sold in 1972, and the AM became WGSO with an adult contemporary format. Around 1984 it switched to a Top 40/CHR format as "Stereo 13Q" under the WQUE-AM call letters. On December 21, 1985 the station switched to R&B oldies as WMKJ, "Majic 1280". Soon thereafter, it became a simulcast of WQUE-FM after the station evolved to a CHUrban format.

Logo as "Sports 1280"

In the early 1990s WQUE tried to change to an all-sports format that included broadcasts of the New Orleans Saints, but it was a failure. On February 1, 1996 the station flipped to an all-blues format as WODT. Despite good ratings, the format did not attract advertisers. In October 2003 WODT moved to sports/talk programing from Fox Sports Radio, ESPN Radio and The Jim Rome Show. WODT was the flagship station of the New Orleans Hornets radio network from 2003–2006. Hornets radio color analyst Gerry Vaillancourt hosted a popular afternoon sports talk call-in show from May 2004—December 2006. The sports format ran for almost five years. The station's final sports-era legal ID was an homage both to the station's small, but loyal following, and to the Jim Rome Show; it contained a frequent Rome Show sign-off clip ("I think what I'm supposed to say is, 'Thank you. I'm out.'") On June 25, 2008, WODT switched to an urban contemporary gospel format, complementing a similar format on sister station WYLD.[1] On September 4, 2012, the station flipped to the syndicated ESPN Deportes format.[2] On September 15, 2014 WODT switched from ESPN Deportes' Spanish-language sports programming back to English-language sports, with programming from Fox Sports Radio.[3] WODT is not available on HD on AM but it is on WNOE FM HD2.[4] A translator on 96.7 FM is planned for WODT in 2020.

On June 29, 2020, fifteen iHeart stations in markets with large African American populations, including WODT, began stunting with African American speeches, interspersed with messages such as "Our Voices Will Be Heard" and "Our side of the story is about to be told," with a new format slated to launch on June 30.[5][6] That day, WODT, along with the other fourteen stations, became the launch stations for the Black Information Network, an African American-oriented all-news network.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ "New Orleans "Sports 1280" WODT flips to Gospel". Radio-Info.com. June 25, 2008.
  2. ^ "WODT flips to Spanish language sports". Radioinsight.com/Lance Venta. September 4, 2012.
  3. ^ Fox Sports Comes to New Orleans
  4. ^ http://www.hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?id=83
  5. ^ Fifteen iHeartMedia Stations Stunting Ahead Of New Network Launch
  6. ^ "Several iHeartMedia Stations Stunting With Speeches, New Format To Be Announced Tomorrow". All Access. June 29, 2020. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  7. ^ "iHeartMedia Debuts All-News BIN: Black Information Network". All Access. June 30, 2020. Retrieved July 1, 2020.

External links[]


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