WDBO is Orlando's oldest radio station, signing on the air on May 24, 1924. It was first licensed to Rollins College in Winter Park. In its early years, it used a number of frequencies, but by 1933, it settled on 580 kHz.[4] In 1935, it got a boost in power from 250 watts to 1,000 watts. It was owned by the Orlando Broadcasting Company, and was a network affiliate of CBS Radio. WDBO carried the CBS line up of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio".
In 1949, WDBO-FM (92.3 FM) was put on the air as a simulcast of WDBO. Five years later, WDBO-TV came on the air, the first television station in Central Florida, matching its radio cousin as a primary CBS television affiliate. In 1982, the firm that owned WDBO-AM-FM-TV, The Outlet Company, sold the radio stations to Katz Broadcasting. (The TV station became WCPX in 1982, and has been WKMG-TV since 1998.) When the stations were sold, WDBO-FM was re-formatted as a country music station, "K92FM", with the call signWWKA.
MOR, AC and talk
As network programming moved from radio to television in the 1950s, WDBO switched to a full-servicemiddle of the road format of popular adult music, news, and sports. The station also joined ABC News Radio and slowly added more talk radio programs. By the 1980s, "58 WDBO" began to scale back on MOR music, and in 1984, the station dropped MOR entirely, switching to adult contemporary music, along with news, information and sports. The change in music came shortly after Leesburg's WHLY switched from its adult contemporary format to Top 40.
When the 1990s began, WDBO was airing a mix of news, talk and adult contemporary music. In March 1991, the station dropped music entirely and it became "NewsTalk 580 WDBO". For years, it was Greater Orlando's highest-rated AM news/talk station. In 1997, WDBO and WWKA were acquired by Cox Radio.[5] In August 2011, Cox ended the classic rock format on WHTQ (96.5 FM), and gave it the call sign WDBO-FM, becoming a simulcast of WDBO. (WDBO's talk programming was initially heard on that station's HD-2 subchannel beginning in late February 2008.) The news/talk station eventually re-branded, using the FM frequency exclusively as "NewsTalk 96-5 WDBO".
Switch to sports
On November 12, 2012, the simulcast ended when WDBO re-launched as a sports radio station affiliated with ESPN Radio, while WDBO-FM continued the news/talk programming on its own. ESPN Radio had been dropped previously by WHOO (1080 AM), which switched its affiliation to NBC Sports Radio.
WDBO carried the full ESPN Radio schedule, except for a local program on weekday afternoons hosted by Scott Anez.[6] WDBO remained the flagship radio station of the Orlando Magicbasketball team until iHeartMedia's WYGM (740 AM) became the home of the Magic at the start of the 2018–2019 season.
Return to talk
On June 24, 2020, Cox Radio announced that WDBO-FM would flip to a Spanish-languagehot adult contemporary hits format as WOEX, "Exitos 96.5". WDBO's news/talk programming concurrently moved back to 580 AM, replacing the sports format. To give listeners in Orlando and its adjacent communities the option to hear WDBO programming on FM, Cox added a simulcast via FM translator W297BB (107.3 FM) on June 29.[7] With the addition of the translator, the station rebranded as "WDBO 107.3 FM and 580 AM".
In September 2021, Cox Media announced reductions to WDBO's staff. Morning anchor Ray Caputo, evening anchor Tony Marino and late morning talk host Darrell Moody were released. The noon news hour was also replaced with talk programming.[8]
Weekends include shows on money, health, law, pets, home improvement, gardening, cars and food. A technology show with Kim Komando is heard Sunday evenings. Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming. Most hours begin with world and national news from ABC News Radio.
There had been a two-hour-long local news block at 5 p.m. until 2024. A local sports show aired in the evening until 2022, Live, Local and Loud, with Nick Gryniewicz and Jerry Daniels. Both were replaced with syndicated talk programs.