WVOC's power is 5,000 watts around the clock. By day it uses a non-directional signal from a single tower. At night, three towers are used in a directional pattern to protect other stations on 560 AM. This concentrates WVOC's signal in the central part of the state.
History
The station signed on as WIS on July 10, 1930.[3] The call letters were derived from South Carolina's nickname "Wonderful Iodine State"; before the modern-day manufacturing of iodized salt, a high level of iodine in the state's soil gave the state's residents "a low incidence of goiters."[4] WIS was the last broadcast station in the United States to have been issued a previously unused call sign with three letters; this assignment took place on January 23, 1930.[5] Soon after signing on, WIS was bought by Liberty Life Insurance Company of Columbia, becoming one of many early radio stations owned by insurance companies in the South.
On October 10, 1931, WIS changed its network affiliation from CBS to the NBC Blue Network.[6] In December 1940, the affiliation was switched to the NBC Red Network.[7]
On November 14, 1949, a two-story studio on Bull Street was completed to house both the radio station and a planned television station. Construction of WIS-TV was authorized January 29, 1953, and the station signed on the air on November 7, 1953.[8] The two stations operated under a newly formed Liberty Insurance subsidiary, the Broadcasting Company of the South. After acquiring several other stations across the country, it changed its name to Cosmos Broadcasting Corporation, with WIS-AM-TV as the flagship stations.
Cosmos pulled out of radio in 1986, and the new owners adopted the call sign WVOC on December 31. The TV station kept the WIS-TV call letters. The radio station had to change its call sign due to a since-repealed FCC rule that barred stations with different ownership from sharing the same call sign. (WVOC had been the call letters of the student radio station at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, from 1964 to 1976.[9]) The new owners dropped the 56-year affiliation with NBC in favor of CBS Radio News.
WVOC began a talk radio format with mostly syndicated shows, including Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Glenn Beck, Matt Drudge, Kim Komando and Coast to Coast AM. The station also featured a statewide-syndicated sports talk show in evenings.
From 1954 until 2002, WIS/WVOC was the flagship for the University of South Carolinacollege football and basketball, and touted itself as the "Home of the Gamecocks." However, on June 27, 2002, Host Communications, which handled game broadcasts for the university, decided to leave WVOC in favor of rival Citadel Broadcasting stations. The decision put Gamecock athletics on Citadel's FM signals, which had wider coverage than WVOC.
WVOC was the flagship radio station of the May 15, 2007, broadcast of the Fox News Republican Presidential Debate which took place in Columbia.
On October 26, 2011, WVOC began simulcasting on its sister station WXBT, which had previously broadcast an urban contemporary format. That November, WXBT changed its call sign to WVOC-FM. On January 3, 2012, as part of a three-way format swap, the sports radio programming that was on WCOS (1400 AM) was moved to WVOC, and the call sign was changed to WXBT. As part of the swap, WXBT adopted the moniker "SportsRadio 560 The Team."
In 2013, WXBT became an affiliate of Fox Sports Radio after it originally carried ESPN Radio programming.
WXBT fired most of its local hosts in October 2014 owing to poor ratings.[10] That November 6, WXBT switched to a simulcast of WVOC-FM, while its former sports programming moved back to WCOS.[11]
The simulcast ended on December 10, when the talk programming moved exclusively to AM 560, which changed its call letters back to WVOC on December 15. WXBT also returned to its previous urban contemporary format; in effect, this move reversed the 2011 format swap. In November 2019, WVOC added an FM translator, W278CY at 103.5 MHz.