WLOK’S HISTORY
The call letters WLOK
originated in 1956 when frequency 1480 WBCR was sold to the OK group, a three-station
chain from Louisiana. The new management changed
the call letters from WBCR to WLOK.
WLOK was the second Memphis
radio station to offer programming directed entirely to
black audience. As its influence continuously grew, WLOK underwent several
changes to meet the demands of an expanding business. The station purchased and
moved to a new building at the corner of Talbot and S. Second
in 1958. In 1963 WLOK changed to its current frequency of 1340. Starr
Broadcasting later bought the station from the OK group.
A group of popular disc
jockeys increased WLOK’s popularity. DJs like Dick “Cane” Cole
and “Hunky Dory” increased WLOK’s ratings. WLOK with
only 1,000 watts surfaced as the young hip, black listener’s preferred station.
While most of their parents were listening to rhythm & blues sounds of
rival station WDIA, African-American teens and young adults were listening to
the new soul sound of WLOK. By the mid 1960s, WLOK emerged as the top station for
younger African-American listeners.


After 1968 and the death of Dr. Martin Luther King,
tensions increased between blacks and whites in this city especially at
stations with all-black programming that claimed to be the “voice” of the black
community, but were white-owned and controlled by white management. Late in
1970, on-air staff walked out of WLOK protesting low wages and poor working
conditions. After a 10-day strike and a series of negotiations that lasted
several months, changes were made not only to benefit the programming staff,
but also the black community at large. First and foremost, WLOK hired an
African-American station manager, Harvey E. Lynch. Furthermore, white ownership
came to understand that the all-black programming staff knew more about what
their listening audience wanted from a station, and the result was a greater
emphasis on getting involved with the community. WLOK set up a community
information center headed by the famous Joan E.W. Golden, “The Golden Girl”.

As the decade advanced, the station enjoyed close ties
with the NAACP and other civil rights organizations like Operation PUSH (People
United to Save Humanity), established by Rev. Jesse Jackson. A few of the
founding members of the Memphis Chapter of Operation PUSH were full-time DJs at
WLOK.
Even though the changes were positive, it wasn’t until
February 1977 that the most significant change, from a racial perspective,
happened at WLOK. Art Gilliam, a young, progressive-minded, Yale-educated black
businessman bought the station in 1977, making WLOK the first black-owned (and
the first locally owned) radio station in the city of Memphis.
That same year, Melvin “A Cooking” Jones was named
Billboard Magazine’s #1 DJ of the Year. Under Art Gilliam’s leadership, the
WLOK Stone Soul Picnic was organized and professionally managed, drawing tens
of thousands of people to the Martin Luther
King Park
each year in the 1980’s. By the mid-eighties, the station had changed its
R&B format to a full-gospel format, and by the late nineties, WLOK had won
honors and acclaim from every major gospel association in the country, earning
for several consecutive years the title of #1 Gospel Station in the nation by Religion
& Media Quarterly.
In February 1997, twenty years after WLOK became the first
African-American owned electronic media outlet in Memphis,
the station was recognized by the Tennessee Historical Commission as a Tennessee
Historical Landmark.
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