WFTL

[2] The station airs a news-talk format and is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting, through licensee WPP FCC License Sub, LLC.

[3] Weekdays on WFTL begin with The South Florida Morning Show with Jennifer Ross and Bill Adams.

The rest of the schedule is nationally syndicated conservative talk programs: Brian Kilmeade, Dan Bongino, Erick Erickson, Joe Pags, Lars Larson, America in the Morning and Red Eye Radio.

[4] Its original call sign was WEAT, and it was owned by the Lake Worth Broadcasting Corporation, headed by Robert Rounsaville.

In the 1970s, the AM station switched to a country music format, with national news supplied by the ABC Information Radio Network.

[9] In October 1986, sportscaster Curt Gowdy sold WEAT-AM-FM to J.J. Taylor Companies Inc. of North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, for an undisclosed price.

The studios were re-equipped for digital sound, with all the music on compact disc and all the commercials run from a computer hard drive.

[11] In July 1994, WEAT switched to an all-news format[12] In October 1995, WEAT-AM-FM were sold to OmniAmerica Group of Cleveland for an estimated $18 million.

WFTL and co-owned stations KBXD, WFLL, and WMEN, were purchased out of bankruptcy from James Crystal Enterprises by Mark Jorgenson's ACM JCE IV B LLC in a transaction that was consummated on August 6, 2015.