The other factor in the KYA-KFRC battle's early days was listener loyalty. KYA's air talent, Gene Nelson, Mike Cleary, Johnny Holliday, Sean O'Callaghan, Ed Heider, Tony Bigg---all were involved in the community. They'd show up at local high schools---in fact,
their basketball team, the KYA Oneders, would regularly play local high school faculty teams.
KFRC had exactly one local name jock when it debuted---Bobby Dale, who'd been at KEWB three years before and was never gonna last in a Drake station.
Even when KYA swapped out most of its air staff and brought in hired guns like Tom Campbell and Chris Edwards, job one for them was community involvement and engagement. And that's something that, with very few exceptions, KFRC didn't really pick up until Dr. Don Rose and John Mack Flanagan in the 70s.
You can give away a Jaguar XK-E (
or you could, until Howard Clark totaled it), but for a lot of the Bay Area (which, really, in those days, apart from San Francisco and Oakland were small towns) showing up at things that mattered to you mattered more.