Monday, April 4, 2016

Park Road Says Hi Tech Nickel To The Dye.^Mon.^Duh From The M*A*S*H Ask The Mill^A^Tear^Read for the log??



Are you lucky enough to have known to get a Transistor Radio at a Great Garage Sale,
again I say thanks to those Wonderful People that had a Video Game real,
so thank you once more as today I am going to look for a radio station licensed in 1922!!!

Ask Sarah or Tam might the language encourage the language to be of an understanding to the tune,
deep throttle that knows a voice is not just the down job on a Staff of vernacular lost to swallowing,
should the text say to the Sheen than that Dock Tore fill will know that a picture is worth BDSM Live,
as a whoa man on the no nonsense to the dye per change jean is as obvious as card game speech,
listen nice to the poe lit a coal on the punctuation through use of a sentence Hops as the teach,
it is an X claim may shin Pt. to the Mountain on the same.

KFBK (AM)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KFBK
KFBK Logo
CitySacramento, California
Broadcast areaSacramento and Stockton, California
BrandingNewsRadio KFBK 1530 AM
SloganSacramento's Only 24-Hour News, Weather and Traffic Station
Frequency1530 kHz (also on HD Radio)
First air dateFebruary 2, 1922
FormatNews/Talk
Power50,000 watts
ClassA
Facility ID10145
Transmitter coordinates38°50′54.00″N 121°28′58.00″W
OwneriHeartMedia
(AMFM Broadcasting Licenses, LLC)
Sister stationsKBEBKFBK-FMKHYLKQJK,KSTE
WebcastListen Live
Websitekfbk.com
KFBK (1530 AM) is a radio station in Sacramento, California broadcasting on a frequency of 1530 kHz. KFBK is a class A station owned by iHeartMedia (formerly Clear Channel Communications). It used to be designated as a class "I-B" station, sharing Class A status on 1530 AM with WCKY in Cincinnati, Ohio. The station boasts the highest field strength of any AM station in the United States.[1] KFBK is also simulcast on KFBK-FM at 93.1 MHz. The station has studios in North Sacramento near Arden Fair Mall, and its transmitter is near Pleasant Grove.
KFBK's daytime signal covers much of the northern portion of the state, from the northern Sacramento Valley to the San Francisco Bay Area and the fringes of the Central Valley. At night, it reaches much of the western half of North America.

Early history[edit]

KFBK's history reaches back to station KVQ (first license issued: February 2, 1922), which shut down later that year after listener complaints about interference. KVQ's facilities were sold to the Kimball-Upson Music Store and the Sacramento Union newspaper.[2]
Later, Kimball-Upson sold out to The McClatchy Company, a local, family-owned company which owned the Sacramento Bee,Modesto Bee and Fresno Bee newspapers. In addition to KFBK, McClatchy would eventually take ownership of radio stations in the same markets, KBEE in Modesto and KMJ in Fresno. At one time, Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto TV station KOVR was also owned by McClatchy.
On October 2, 1948, KFBK increased its power to 50 KW.[3]

1950s and 1960s[edit]

As television took over network programming, KFBK reinvented itself as a news, information, sports, and entertainment station. Because of its 50,000 W signal strength and location in the heart of the Central Valley, the station became the chief method by which farmers obtained weather, prices and other vital farming information. KFBK carried CBS Radio Network programming including top-of-the-hour newscasts, plus specialized reports from Edward R. Murrow and Lowell Thomas. Local news programs included theRichfield ReporterTony Koester was both the long-time voice of the minor league Sacramento Solons and the station's sports director. When the San Francisco Giants arrived in 1958, the station began a long partnership carrying their games. Entertainment programming included Arthur Godfrey and Doug Pledger.[4]

The talk of the town[edit]

In the 1970s, with less network programming available, KFBK began programming talk shows as part of their broadcast day, promoting them as "The Talk of the Town". After a brief trial as an adult contemporary music station, ownership committed themselves to a format that included news blocks during morning and afternoon drive time, with the remainder of the day's programming featuring local talk shows. With the U.S. Federal Communications Commission implementing a newspaper-broadcasting cross-ownership rule, McClatchy was forced to divest itself of its radio and television stations. KFBK was sold to Westinghouse Broadcasting and later shifted network affiliation to ABC Radio.[4]

Rush Limbaugh[edit]

During the 1980s, KFBK employed Morton Downey, Jr. as a local midday host. After Downey's departure, Rush Limbaugh replaced him at the station. Limbaugh first rose to prominence at KFBK before becoming nationally syndicated in 1988.[5] Limbaugh's national program still airs on KFBK in the same time slot (9:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon) where he hosted locally.
Limbaugh's local replacement after leaving KFBK, Tom Sullivan has also taken his program into national syndication, after taking an anchor position at the new cable TV business channel Fox Business Network. Like Limbaugh, Sullivan's national show (syndicated via Fox News Radio),[6] continues to air on KFBK in its former local time slot.
A number of other KFBK alumni have come to national media prominence. Former KFBK news reporter/anchor Laura Ingle is a featured reporter on Fox News Channel. Former KFBK reporter and weekend anchor Todd Starnes hosts commentaries for Fox News Radio, and former KFBK evening host Spencer Hughes airs a weekday program Fox Across America on Fox News Radio's satellite radio channel.
Changes in ownership laws saw KFBK, its FM outlet, and other area stations becoming part of Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia) entering the 1990s.

KFBK begins FM simulcasting[edit]

KFBK-FM began simulcasting on December 1, 2011 at 92.5 FM, the former home of KGBY. This was mainly to fill in areas east of Sacramento where the AM signal is weaker at night to protect WCKY. On December 26, 2013 KFBK began a trimulcast on 93.1 FM, the former home of Classic 93.1 (KHLX); the simulcast ended a week later when KHLX adopted a country music format as KBEB.

Prominent programming[edit]


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