Current WAGT-CD license
The license for W67BE (the call letters reflected its original location on UHF channel 67) was first granted on March 28, 1985. It was Augusta's first independent station, airing a collection of public domain black-and-white western movies, infomercials and programming such as Sewing with Nancy (unusual as that program was mainly offered for public television). It later became Augusta's first Fox affiliate before the emergence of WFXG (channel 54) in 1991. The station would eventually re-make itself, and on January 2, 1995, the station became WBEK-LP; nine days later, it became an affiliate of The WB upon the network's launch. During this period, the station was known locally as "The WB on WBEK 67".
In 1998, WBAU, a local affiliate of The WB 100+ Station Group, signed on, appearing on cable systems in the Augusta area; as a result, WBEK lost its WB affiliation. The station then became an affiliate of UPN, and for a few years sold advertising on WBAU, before these rights went to WRDW-TV (channel 12; this changed hands once more before The WB 100+ was replaced with The CW Plus). In 2001, WBEK moved to a new channel location, channel 16, and obtained Class A status (modifying its call sign to WBEK-CA).
After the affiliation switch, the station attempted to maintain its status as a "top" local affiliate. The station's move to channel 16 had come with a loss in power, and viewership began to decline. The station picked up a secondary affiliation with America One during this period. In 2004, the station lost the UPN affiliation to WRDW's digital subchannel 31.2 ("UPN Augusta"), and continued on with America One programming to very little viewer interest. In 2015, the station converted to digital broadcasting and became WBEK-CD. That same year, America One and cable network Youtoo TV merged to become Youtoo America.
On August 27, 2015, longtime owner AVN agreed to sell WBEK-CD to Gray Television, owner of WRDW-TV, for $550,000. The sale did not include the station's existing cable carriage on Comcast or the WBEK call letters;[2] Gray thus applied to change the station's call letters to WRDW-CD.[3] The sale was completed on October 27, 2015,[4] at which time the call sign change to WRDW-CD took effect.[5]
In September 2015, Gray announced its purchase of the television properties of Schurz Communications, including WAGT. Gray proposed to merge the two stations' operations at WRDW's facilities (replacing a previous shared services agreement with Media General), and offer WAGT's broadcast spectrum during the FCC's upcoming spectrum reallocation auction. Gray could not legally own both WRDW and WAGT; FCC rules do not allow one entity to own two of the four highest-rated stations in a market, and Augusta had only five full-power stations—not enough to legally permit a duopoly in any event. To solve the problem, Gray had proposed a waiver in which it would shut down WAGT upon closure of the deal.[6] In January 2016, Gray requested special temporary authority to immediately move WRDW-CD to WAGT's operating facility, which would have its power reduced for the low-power parameters of WRDW-CD. As it would cause interference, Gray stated that WAGT would simultaneously discontinue its full-power signal, essentially replacing it with WRDW-CD.[7] This request implied that Gray intended to transfer the WAGT intellectual unit (programming, NBC affiliation and staff) to the low-power signal upon the completion of its purchase,[8] as low-power stations are not subject to FCC duopoly rules. On February 1, 2016, the station's call letters changed to WAGT-CD.
The FCC approved the sale of Schurz's television properties to Gray on February 12, 2016, and approved Gray's waiver for the duopoly restrictions concerning WRDW and WAGT. However, it ordered Gray to continue operating WAGT through the auction. Gray went on with its plans to end the SSA and JSA with Media General. In response, Media General sought an injunction restricting removal of the JSA or sale of the station after accusing Gray of violating the agreement. The injunction was granted, only to be struck down by the Supreme Court of Georgia on March 23, 2016.[9][8][10] At the auction, Gray sold WAGT's broadcast spectrum for $40,763,036. The FCC stated that WAGT would not share spectrum with another channel, and would instead go off the air.[11]
On May 31, 2017, Gray Television returned WAGT's full-power license to the FCC. WAGT-CD then moved to WAGT's former operating facilities, dropped Yootoo America programming, and took over WAGT's intellectual property, talent, NBC affiliation, and syndicated programming. The change was implemented in a way that did not require most over-the-air viewers to rescan their sets in order to keep watching the station. On-air operations remained unchanged. Gray estimated that only five percent of WAGT's over-the-air audience lost access to NBC with the move to low power.[12]
Initially, the combined operation was housed at WRDW's studios on Georgia Avenue in North Augusta, South Carolina. In 2021, the stations moved to a new studio in Augusta's Riverwatch development. In a nod to Augusta National Golf Club, the new studio features a putting green.[13][14][15]