The early management team included: Bevo Whitmire, Ken Beechboard, R. A. Jolly, Wilson Wearn and Bruce Buchanan.
During the late 1940s and early 1950s, WFBC-FM featured the Esso Reporter each 30 minutes during the morning hours with Norvin Duncan as host.
Other early morning shows; Housekeeping-a-hobby with Alice Wyman, Kitchen Kapers with Claude Freeman and The "Aristocratic Pigs" with Baby Ray.
WFBC-FM started programming Drake Chenaults (Hit Parade) format in early 1971 becoming one of the most popular radio stations in the upstate.
Past on-air staff during the 1960s and 1970s on WFBC-FM include: Norvin Duncan, Johnny Wright, Bob Poole, Bob Shelley, Monty Dupuy, Stowe Hoyle, Ben Greer, Bill Kregar, Verner Tate, Alice Wyman, Claude Freeman, Wilfred Walker, Billy Powell, Lee Kanipe, Max Mace, Jeff Fields, Ray Clune, Johnny Batson, Andy Scott, Ken Rogers, Dan Kelly, Jerry Haynes, Jim Burnside, Eston Johnson, Scott Shannon, Bill Love, Dale Gilbert, Dave Partridge, Jim Phillips, Rick Driver and Patty Snow.
Announcers in that time frame included; Ken Rogers, Steve Chris, Lee Alexander, Russ Cassell, Robin Keith ("Rockin Robin"), Chris Scott, Heidi Aiken, Eric Rogers, Lisa Rollins, Jan Meng, Little Anthony Keller, Dan Stevens, "Spanky" Jim Miller, Lee Nolan, "Brother Bill" Prather, Joe Fletcher, Lou Simon and many more.
The station also produced and networked several award-winning Carolina Beach Music shows with Ken Rogers and Leighton Grantham.
WYFF-TV weatherman Dale Gilbert did mid-mornings on WFBC-FM during part of this period as well as doing the morning weather Broadcasts on channel 4.
WYFF (as WFBC-TV) and WFBC AM/FM shared the same building from 1955 until 1977, when a new radio facility was built adjacent to the TV station on Rutherford Street.
In April 1994, WFBC-AM-FM was sold, and in 1995, after stunting with a disc jockey reading the local phone book,[2] WFBC-FM switched to its current CHR format.
On September 13, 2024, WFBC-FM began teasing a change coming on September 23 at 7:00 a.m..[5] At that time, after a half-hour of three fake format changes (Christmas music as "Magic 93.7", classic hits as "Earth-FM", and classic hip-hop as "93.7 The Block"), the station announced the addition of the Jacksonville, Florida-based "Dex & Barbie T Show", hosted by Dex Mitchell and Barbie T. Whitmire, in afternoons.
On October 16, the station switched to variety hits as "Simon", with an official announcement of the final format to follow.
[13] When WSPA-FM was sold and flipped to Regional Mexican on April 1, 2024, the HD4 channel continued airing the adult contemporary format along with WYRD-HD2.