WTSB


WTSB is a radio station licensed by the FCC to serve the community of Selma, North Carolina. The station is owned by Lamm Media Group, Incorporated. The station is daytime only, and is a "full service" AM station, providing local news, obituaries and typical small town full service programming along with Southern Gospel, Bluegrass Gospel Music and classic gospel music.

History of WTSB, Lumberton

WTSB was located at 580 AM, and broadcast at 500 watts during the day and 50 watts at night in 2000. The station signed on in 1947, owned by Robeson Broadcasting Corp. Jack Pait, who had a furniture business in Lumberton, was majority stockholder. Levi E. Willis Sr., president and owner of Willis Broadcasting of Norfolk, Virginia, bought WTSB in 1997 from Beasley Broadcast Group which had bought WTSB and WKML. Both stations aired country music for a year when they were co-owned, but WTSB ended up going off the air for a while. Willis played traditional black gospel until WTSB went off the air in 2000. Though Willis believed the station could return it did not.

History of WBZB, Selma/Garner

Prior to 1999, WBZB aired country music along with conservative talk. The former owner walked into Bass Music Enterprises, owned by Steve Bass, and asked, "Wanna buy a radio station?"
In 2002, about two years after Bass became the primary owner of WBZB, the station was located in Garner and playing anything and everything by North Carolina musicians, or musicians from nearby states who were well known in the state. The playlist included about 1700 songs. Artists included Arrogance, Nancy Middleton, Blue Dust Box, Jam Pain Society, John Saylor, and Tift Merritt In 2003, Shane Gentry, a nudist and member of Nekkid Monday began hosting the "Naked Monday Show" celebrating the nudist lifestyle.
WBZB received approval for a power increase from 800 to 1600 watts, but after a year, even though Bass claimed the station was close to making money, his investors were unable to stay with him. He sold the station on eBay.
Triangle Sports Broadcasters bought WBZB and changed the letters to WTSB, also increasing the signal to 9000 watts, and switched to sports talk July 12, 2004, calling the station "Your Triangle Sports Ticket". The programming included local hosts as well as ESPN radio.
On November 1, 2007, WTSB was sold to Lamm Media Group Lamm announced his retirement effective at the end of March 2019; Truth Broadcasting, a religious broadcaster, entered a local marketing agreement beginning April 1, 2019 to keep the station on the air.

Programming

WTSB runs a full-service variety format, including local news and tradio, with much of its programming sold to radio evangelists. Reruns of Lum and Abner air every weekday on the station.

Translator

WTSB 1090AM is a daytime only signal, but programming can be heard 24/7 on 105.5FM as well as online.