WODZ-FM signed on in August 1968[2] as WKAL-FM, owned by Maurer Broadcasting Corporation and operating at 95.9 FM. The station originally simulcast its AM sister station, WKAL (1450 AM).[3] In 1977, WKAL-FM dropped the simulcast in favor of beautiful music.[4]
Maurer Broadcasting Corporation sold WKAL AM-FM to Wooster Republican Publishing Company of Wooster, Ohio in 1980.[5] In July 1984, WKAL-FM changed its call letters to WTCO,[6] and became a country music station, "Top Country." The following year, the station, along with WKAL, was acquired by Howard Green and Donald Simmons, owner of WENY AM-TV and WLEZ in Elmira and WOND and WMGM FM-TV in Atlantic City, New Jersey.[7] The new owners reverted the station's call letters to WKAL-FM on February 10, 1986,[8] and implemented a soft adult contemporary format.[9]
Target Communications bought WKAL AM-FM from Green and Simmons in 1987;[10] soon after taking over, on February 1, 1988, the call sign was changed to WFRG-FM,[11] and the station returned to country music, this time branded "96 Frog".[12] The new format was simulcast on 1450 AM, which also took the WFRG call letters[11] (save for a short time in the early 1990s when the AM station broke away to become oldies station WZLB);[13] in addition, the station moved to its current frequency, 96.1.[14] Target Communications eventually became Arrow Communications, which went into receivership in 1992,[15] and then in November 1993, WFRG AM-FM was purchased by Forever Broadcasting, owners of WIBX and dominant market leader WLZW.[2] Forever renamed the stations WODZ and launched an oldies format, with the country format and WFRG-FM call letters moving to 104.3 FM.[16] The simulcast on AM 1450 continued until May 1999, when that frequency was sold to the Bible Broadcasting Network and became WYFY[17] (it has since reclaimed the WKAL call sign). Forever sold its stations in the market, including WODZ-FM, to Regent Communications (the forerunner to Townsquare Media) several months later.[18] On January 2, 2015, WODZ shifted to classic hits and rebranded from "Oldiez 96" to "96.1 The Eagle."[19]