The studios are inside Kincaid Towers on West Vine Street in downtown Lexington.
Weekends feature specialty shows on money, health, gardening, movies, real estate, travel, technology, food and wine.
It was powered at 1,000 watts and was a network affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System, carrying its news, sports, dramas and comedies during the "Golden Age of Radio".
From 1968 until the 1990s, WVLK was the flagship radio station of the University of Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball and football games.
[1] Before that network was established, stations had to produce their own individual broadcasts of Kentucky Wildcats football and basketball games, and WVLK and WLAP 630 AM were the primary Lexington-area radio outlets for the games before the network began.
[6] On June 20, W266AN was forced off the air due to interference with WSGS in the Central Kentucky area.
The station's AM signal provides at least secondary coverage to most of central Kentucky, as well as parts of the Louisville radio market, and as far south as the Lake Cumberland area.
Among the early voices at WVLK, US Representative Harold Rogers was a disc jockey at the station in 1959, while he was a student at the University of Kentucky.