The Station

News Talk & Tar Heels Station

  • WCHL serves a unique community with programming and involvement in the things that matter to the people who live here.

  • WCHL is where they live. Its all news and talk format, the nation's number one format 12+, is intensely and uniquely local to Chapel Hill-Carrboro. It is a point of view.

"If there's a shooting in Durham at high noon, WCHL interrupts its programming only if they shoot a Chapel Hillian. If someone slips on a banana peel on Weaver Street that backs up traffic for two blocks, it is cause for a live remote."
    -Jim Heavner, President of VilCom, owner of WCHL

  • Their kids matter. WCHL is the voice of 2,000 local school kids, recorded by WCHL one kid at a time, with traffic safety appeals.

  • Issues matter. In every census, Chapel Hill-Carrboro is one of America's best-educated communities, frequently at the top. Serving that audience, WCHL's news department has won more local news awards than any other radio station in North Carolina.

  • What matters is more than the government. WCHL does not rely on town hall or UNC to generate its news. WCHL has resumed its monthly-every month-"community leaders lunches" to find out what all segments of the community is proud of and is angry about. It is a unique local approach to news coverage.

  • Recognition matters. WCHL focuses on daily celebrations of the good things that help a town shape a positive, can-do, self-image. It's "Daily Village Pride Awards," for example, ensures that consistency. It's a point of view.

  • Courage matters. WCHL is unafraid to tell the truth. In the four decades that VilCom has operated WCHL, no story has ever been removed from the air because it was injurious to some special interest or even the management of the station. The community relies on that consistency and honesty.

  • The world matters. WCHL doesn't send listeners elsewhere to keep up with the world. CBS Radio News is the broadcast journalism standard led on WCHL by Charles Osgood.

  • Games and fun matter. From high schools to city leagues to the Tar Heels, on WCHL, it's all there. WCHL is the originator, and still the flagship, of the Tar Heel Sports Network.

  • Laughter and joy matter. WCHL is fun, every hour. Games that tease, contests that reward, interaction with callers that bring a smile, are part of WCHL's legendary appeal.



Stormy Weather
Orange Delegate Impressed By Clinton's Speech
Six Vehicle Break-Ins Reported In Meadowmont
Thorp: Tough To Compete With Private Schools
Mebane Center Helps U.S., Iraqi Students Talk
UNC Pit Driver Sentenced To A Minimum 266 Months
First Year For Seniors At Carrboro High


Thursday, August 28, 2008
midnight - 3:00am - Air America
3:00am - 5:00am - Air America
5:00am - 6:00am - America This Morning with Jim Bohannon
6:00am - 9:00am - WCHL Morning News with Ron Stutts
9:00am - noon - Stephanie Miller Show
noon - 3:00pm - Ed Schultz
3:00pm - 5:00pm - Randi Rhodes
5:00pm - 6:00pm - Live at 5 with Jeff Hamlin
6:00pm - 7:00pm - Who''s Talking with D.G. Martin
7:00pm - 8:00pm - Butch Davis Live
8:00pm - 9:00pm - Air America
9:00pm - 10:00pm - Air America
10:00pm - 11:00pm - Who''s Talking with D.G. Martin
11:00pm - midnight - Air America

2008 Chapel Hill-Carrboro-Orange County Forum
News Talk 1360 WCHL hosted the 2008 Chapel Hill- Carrboro-Orange County Forum

The 10-hour forum was held on Thursday, April 17th and broadcast LIVE on WCHL. Click here to listen to the entire broadcast.


The Money Jam
SideDish
The Home Show
The Seasoned Gardener
Who's Talking with D.G. Martin
The Arts Spot


McClamroch Hall 88 Vilcom Circle, Suite 130 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 (919) 933-4165 Fax (919) 968-3748
WCHL 1360, an equal opportunity employer, is dedicated to providing broad outreach regarding job vacancies at the station.
We seek the help of local organizations in referring qualified applicants to our station.
Organizations that wish to receive our vacancy information should contact Christy Dixon at WCHL 1360 by calling 919.933.4165.