You can put the frequency, that's it.And the frequency should never go between the call and the city! Throw the book at 'em, FCC!![]()
You can put the frequency, that's it.And the frequency should never go between the call and the city! Throw the book at 'em, FCC!![]()
This morning, I heard Tavis Smiley say his guest on the first hour of his Monday 8/9/21 show will be Larry Elder.
Looking forward to it!
Another unapologeticly non-progressive. hmmmmmThis morning, I heard Tavis Smiley say his guest on the first hour of his Monday 8/9/21 show will be Larry Elder.
Looking forward to it!
They should simply identify as: KBLA Santa Monica-Los Angeles. The FCC changed the ID rules decades ago to allow a station to co-identify with other cities within their market. Previously they had to ask the FCC for permission. Interestingly in 1580 KDAY's peak years they DID ask permission to identify as Santa Monica-Los Angeles and were rejected. 1110 KRLA Pasadena did the same thing and they were rejected also. The Commission's "reasoning" back then was that radio stations are only licensed to serve their City of License and everything else is incidental!
In 1983 or thereabouts the station ID rules were relaxed, and you could say any city after the City of License. Before, you had to get permission from the FCC and only if the additional community was within the principal contour.when did the fcc ever tell you what you could say after calls and city of license?
As far as I'm aware, my station could say "KSKO MCGrath, Anchorage" ever since it signed on 40 years ago, even when it went from a 10kw AM to a 100 W FM with repeaters 5 years ago.... even though Anchorage is 230 miles away and the AM never covered anchorage at all, reliably
You can put the frequency, that's it
At that early time, such was named a "dual city ID" and was part of the station's authorization. Today, after naming the legal city (or cities) of license, you can name any city or location you want.In 1983 or thereabouts the station ID rules were relaxed, and you could say any city after the City of License. Before, you had to get permission from the FCC and only if the additional community was within the principal contour.
In the old days a station, let's say KTVU, Channel 2 licensed to Oakland had to get approval to Identify as KTVU, Oakland/San Francisco. When the rules were relaxed, they were able to add San Jose which is outside of the primary contour.
I find the most amusing is when an AM-FM with separate calls ID's as "WAAA-AM and WZZZ-FM, Anytown" when AM's don't have a suffix (they were, of course, first in the game) and FMs only have the "FM" suffix if there is an AM with those calls.There's a long list of acceptable insertions within 73.1201. Frequency is one, but it's not the only one.
Professor Fybush is correct. So if you can't fall asleep tonight, read this: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CFR-2010-title47-vol4/pdf/CFR-2010-title47-vol4-sec73-1201.pdfThere's a long list of acceptable insertions within 73.1201. Frequency is one, but it's not the only one.
I find interesting, KCSN is licensed to Northridge, which entirely fits within the City of Los Angeles. It could be due to it's limited coverage and the fact that the post office recognizes it as a separate community.If you want a fun project, be responsible for a station licensed to a town that is annexed by another city where the city of license no longer exists. A half-century ago, I had such a case and it took over a year to convince the FCC that "Río Piedras" no longer existed and WUNO was now in San Juan.
There's a long list of acceptable insertions within 73.1201. Frequency is one, but it's not the only one.
I love it!Professor Fybush is correct. So if you can't fall asleep tonight, read this: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CFR-2010-title47-vol4/pdf/CFR-2010-title47-vol4-sec73-1201.pdf
The most famous non-city is Hollywood.I find interesting, KCSN is licensed to Northridge, which entirely fits within the City of Los Angeles. It could be due to it's limited coverage and the fact that the post office recognizes it as a separate community.
For radio, the key sentence is, "That the name of the licensee, the station’s frequency, the station’s channel number, as stated on the station’s license, and/or the station’s network affiliation may be inserted between the call letters and station location. ".I love it!
I clicked that and got the warranty information for 70's AMC motor vehicles.Professor Fybush is correct. So if you can't fall asleep tonight, read this: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CFR-2010-title47-vol4/pdf/CFR-2010-title47-vol4-sec73-1201.pdf
Sorry about that. Here's what you can include in station ID's:I clicked that and got the warranty information for 70's AMC motor vehicles.
Years ago we had an election to break the SFV away from Los Angeles and be a separate city (we lost). They said it would be too expensive. Funny, the Cities of Burbank, and San Fernando, which are within the SFV seem to be doing just fine!The most famous non-city is Hollywood.
LA is full of such "places" that are really large neighborhoods and not separate communities. Van Nuys, Sherman Oaks, North Hollywood, Toluca Lake, Studio City and on and on.
Years ago we had an election to break the SFV away from Los Angeles and be a separate city (we lost). They said it would be too expensive. Funny, the Cities of Burbank, and San Fernando, which are within the SFV seem to be doing just fine!
Something is wrong... still. I get the AMC Pacer. Instead. Unfortunately.Sorry about that. Here's what you can include in station ID's:
No. The "July month" is actually partly in June, and in any case, KBLA got a 0.0 in that period.Did KBLA have any impact on KFI's drop?