[2] The station was owned by the Piedmont Broadcasting Company, a venture of William H. Kirby and John B. Burns,[3] and aired a country music format from studios on Old Buncombe Road.
[8] Dabney-Adamson dropped the long-running religious programming for a news/talk format based on the audio of CNN Headline News, as well as weekend sports and cultural shows.
[9] The show quickly grew to 12 hours on Saturdays and six on Sundays, and the station was airing Spanish-language programming daily beginning in late June.
[11] The founder of WDAB's original Spanish-language programming, Carlos García, soon left to convert WGVL (1440 AM) into a competing full-service outlet.
[12] On January 27, 2007, what had been "La Poderosa" flipped from a secular format to religious programming after operator Belén Robles affiliated the station with the Atlanta-based Cadena Radial de Vida, directed by pastor Julián Herrera.