pining forthe fjords
Beers on me, Mark.
pining forthe fjords
Except the complaint of many here is that 'radio' as a form of media does not serve a segment of the potential audience, and therefore radio is dying. That audience went somewhere else because traditional radio - that which appeals to mass markets in a target demo - no longer fits their taste. Going through a quick run of signals in San Francisco on the fccdata.org site I counted 49 FM stations that I know from experience can be received on a portable radio in San Francisco. Of those, maybe 20 or so (I think I'm being generous) fit into the category of "we're a commercial success and contribute to the cluster".Sure, but that doesn't help the case overall for 'radio' as a form of media.
I don't think so, Mark. KFOG had been owned by Susquehanna for many years, long enough to have very little debt. But their corporate overlords, which was Pfalzgraf (sp?), the dinnerware and ceramics company, decided they didn't want to be in broadcasting any longer. KNBR went to Cumulus, a few years prior to the merger with Citadel, which itself had acquired the ABC O&O's a few years prior. KNBR came to the witch's brew from GE, having been one of the NBC O&O's spun off when GE swallowed RCA and decided NBC shouldn't be in radio any more. (Did I miss any intermediate M&A in this mess?)[3] Lee Abrams came up with the format; it was installed by General Electric. This makes it even more amazing that the station managed for decades to project the image of an independent broadcaster. In many ways, the KFOG imaging was better than the music.
I don't think so, Mark. KFOG had been owned by Susquehanna for many years, long enough to have very little debt. But their corporate overlords, which was Pfalzgraf (sp?), the dinnerware and ceramics company, decided they didn't want to be in broadcasting any longer. KNBR went to Cumulus, a few years prior to the merger with Citadel, which itself had acquired the ABC O&O's a few years prior. KNBR came to the witch's brew from GE, having been one of the NBC O&O's spun off when GE swallowed RCA and decided NBC shouldn't be in radio any more. (Did I miss any intermediate M&A in this mess?)
GE owned it and instigated the format change from easy-listening in 1982. It was sold to Susquehanna in November 1983, the last of the pre-RCA GE broadcast properties other than then-KOA-TV to be divested. This was before the RCA purchase.I don't think so, Mark. KFOG had been owned by Susquehanna for many years, long enough to have very little debt.
That's for sure.Regardless, by the 2010's, this was a mess of a cluster, with so much different DNA that it's amazing everybody worked off 60 cycle electricity.
For those who haven't heard it, here's a scoped aircheck of the format change on September 16, 1982 (it happens 8:43 in):GE owned it and instigated the format change from easy-listening in 1982. It was sold to Susquehanna in November 1983, the last of the pre-RCA GE broadcast properties other than then-KOA-TV to be divested. This was before the RCA purchase.
See: https://www.worldradiohistory.com/h...BC-IDX/83-OCR/BC-1983-11-21-OCR-Page-0063.pdf
Regarding the format change on September 26, 1982 (two URLs because there's a jump):
The format was labeled "Timeless Rock" but I don't believe that was a slogan actually used on-air.
That's for sure.
The interesting thing about that Billboard article is that the station, from the start of the format in 1982, was going after an older audience. And they kept the fog horn.For those who haven't heard it, here's a scoped aircheck of the format change on September 16, 1982 (it happens 8:43 in):
It seems to me that KEXP tries to appeal to a younger, more diverse audience.
For those who haven't heard it, here's a scoped aircheck of the format change on September 16, 1982 (it happens 8:43 in):
I always felt KFOG's image and listener connection was better than their playlist,
I do think there's a certain psychographic that doesn't "age" musically in the way past generations did. Not that they're the majority, but apparently enough to fund projects like this.
I'm one of those current music followers who was born 5 days into the Boomer generation. But I am not a follower of eclectic formats like AAA; my choices are mostly in the area of Vallenato music and lots of reggaetón and its derivatives. In English, I'm a big follower of current country.That's an interesting way to put it, but I know what you're talking about. I know some longtime music fans who mainly listen to current music, not music from their youth. They tend to like these non-com AAAs.
Right now on KEXP the DJ Larry Mizell Jr. (the son of Sr. of the Mizell Brothers production crew), is breaking down Burt Bacharach's influence on pop music. Playlist starts with Burt, then, Lupe Fiasco, Dionne Warwick, Mos Def, Gals & Pals, and Royksopp, on and on.
The whole concept of 'format' is sort of reductionist in that its primary purpose is to give sales people a way to quantify the demo for advertisers.
When I moved to San Francisco 25 years (eek!) ago, I found KFOG to be disappointing after having been a WXRT listener in Chicago. I once described KFOG as "a classic rock station in disguise", which may have not been the most fair criticism, but was reflective of its cautious nature. KITS had, by that time, become KOME North, so Bay Area radio wasn't the new and exciting landscape it had been just five or six years earlier.I always felt KFOG's image and listener connection was better than their playlist, at times. I remember in pre-streaming days, having heard OF the station, knew many loyal fans, and then actually visited the area and heard it, how musically conservative it was for the image it had. Not saying it wasn't a good station, but it was much more conservative than people perceived it.
(raises hand)That's an interesting way to put it, but I know what you're talking about. I know some longtime music fans who mainly listen to current music, not music from their youth. They tend to like these non-com AAAs.
That's neat! Do you have a photo of it, by chance?I have a silver foil poster from the beautiful music era of KFOG.
Completely agree with the take on KFOG's image and listener connection vs. the playlist. Engaged listeners knew the DJs cared deeply about the music and would have loved to have played more eclectic stuff, but they also understood the reality of commercial radio. That said we still got nuggets here and there...Dave Morey, 10 at 10, Sunday mornings with Rosalie etc. etc.I always felt KFOG's image and listener connection was better than their playlist, at times. I remember in pre-streaming days, having heard OF the station, knew many loyal fans, and then actually visited the area and heard it, how musically conservative it was for the image it had. Not saying it wasn't a good station, but it was much more conservative than people perceived it.
KEXP always surprises me in how many older listeners seem to value and support it. I love the station, but I have pretty eclectic and broad tastes (which is not the norm) and KEXP actively curates youthful, new and diverse sounds. Good for them, but it certainly doesn't play by the rules of what one would expect to draw the support it does. I do think there's a certain psychographic that doesn't "age" musically in the way past generations did. Not that they're the majority, but apparently enough to fund projects like this.
Heck, even before those GE, Kaiser Broadcasting co-owned KFOG alongside channel 44.True, but this was a time when listeners had a strong connection to radio, regardless of ownership. KFOG was owned by General Electric and Susquehanna. Neither of them were mom & pop owners. But listeners related as though these were small indie operators.
I've listened to the video @michael hagerty linked back in post #186, and I'll go on the record as one of the few participants of this thread who liked KFOG better before the format change 🙃