I very well know, haha, typo there! Sorry.KSAN is actually at 107.7. 107.3 is a religious station from Livermore.
I very well know, haha, typo there! Sorry.KSAN is actually at 107.7. 107.3 is a religious station from Livermore.
I wouldn’t “bet” on that....Yes. I think the "KGO" sign is gone, though. I haven't been by there since the pandemic.
Yes. I think the "KGO" sign is gone, though. I haven't been by there since the pandemic.
Remember, this is still Cumulus, and removing that old K-G-O sign would cost money.I wouldn’t “bet” on that....
I get that but I was just joking about KGO’s new sports betting formatRemember, this is still Cumulus, and removing that old K-G-O sign would cost money.
OTOH, I wouldn't be surprised if they turned off the neon in the sign to save on their PG&E bill.
As of just a few weeks ago, it was there. Why would it not be?Yes. I think the "KGO" sign is gone, though. I haven't been by there since the pandemic.
There might be a tax write-off for donating it to the Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge.The transmitting site is useless for anything else, so probably no real-estate deals on that one.
I think their ratings also collapsed........The birds and the fish thank you!
And the "error screen" from my website thanks you...
View attachment 4437
KGO following the 1989 seismic event.
Except for a relatively brief interruption, I think KGO-TV (channel 7) was among the very few stations that was still on the air that day.And the "error screen" from my website thanks you...
![]()
KGO following the 1989 seismic event.
I blame lack of coffee or the cat for that!I very well know, haha, typo there! Sorry.
I remember being in SoCal listening to their coverage that evening. Came in fine on my car radio.KGO 810 was knocked off the air by the Loma Prieta quake, but they returned in non-directional operation before sundown. KGO reporter Ken Berry tells the tale: https://www.norcalmediamuseum.org/?page_id=2292
Closest thing I've ever found is KFBK, Sacramento---aircheck starts before the quake and we hear the first word, the anchor reaction and them sending both their traffic plane and a reporter, Gregg Fishman (who later worked at KGO) to the Bay Area:Did anyone record any airchecks of local radio coverage of Loma Prieta?
I've tried looking around online, but I haven't found anything.
c
Woke much? Lmfao. Yeah if you want a cop out and call people racist, you might want to reserve that one if and when they actually mention race. Jump the gun a bit now didn't we?One does not work because it aged out while, at the same time, interest in instrumental music nearly disappeared. Smooth Jazz was killed by the change in ratings systems.
If you actually look at the data, usage of radio by age group is not terribly different between non-Hispanic whites, Hispanics and Blacks. African Americans tend to listen more to "regular" radio than the other groups but the differences are not astoundingly large.
Oh, and if you are referring to Hispanics in your moderately racist comment, you should know that in nearly every market except Miami, more than half of all Hispanics are English dominant and thus, very likely, legal residents or citizens. In fact, in markets like San Antonio, over 85% of Hispanics are English dominant... many have families that have likely been in the US longer than yours has.
Smooth jazz is a valid streaming format. It failed in OTA commercial radio because the PPM revealed that it had a very narrow cume. In the new ratings methodology, no "phantom cume" appeared, although it did in nearly every other format. So the format had no cume growth, and, like all stations, TSL was shown to be vastly less than demonstrated in the diary.
Beautiful Music had no party affiliation. Interest in instrumentals and softer music died, in general, as the 80's progressed. The format lost any and all 25-54 appeal, and thus it could not attract adveertisers.
I stand by my words, not whatever that is you have added or imagined, but I wish you all the best in working whatever that is out.
That is gut-wrenching to listen to after all this time (a third of a century last month!). I could only take 20 minutes of it. I was in Santa Clara when it hit, about 20 miles north of Loma Prieta, finishing up at work (across the street from where Levi's Stadium is now). My wife worked in downtown San Jose, a few miles closer to the epicenter. Fun night trying to rendezvous, get back up the Peninsula, and then calm down the family back in New York. Thanks for that trip down misery lane.Closest thing I've ever found is KFBK, Sacramento---aircheck starts before the quake and we hear the first word, the anchor reaction and them sending both their traffic plane and a reporter, Gregg Fishman (who later worked at KGO) to the Bay Area:
https://pastdaily.com/2022/10/17/earthquake-october-17-1989/
Saying that certain ethnic stations are listened to only by illegal immigrants is very definitely racist.Woke much? Lmfao. Yeah if you want a cop out and call people racist, you might want to reserve that one if and when they actually mention race. Jump the gun a bit now didn't we?
No idea here as to what you mean by that.Needless to say, if you have a bias against some group of Americans I can't help you with that.
Idem.I stand by my words, not whatever that is you have added or imagined, but I wish you all the best in working whatever that is out.
Your statement was "And, in a few years when radio reworks their strategy and realize that all they have left are old people, and poor first generation non citizen Americans," and that is offensive to me and to all the people I have worked with at stations that serve audiences who prefer their entertainment and news and information in Spanish.I welcome debate on the words that I type anytime. It's rather insulting to the person that you do it to, and silly on your part to add words that are not there or make determinations that could never objectively be concluded from the text that you are replying to.
Today, they have no plane, no reporters on the street. And no San Francisco station has staff at the transmitter to "recover" after some kind of quake damage.Closest thing I've ever found is KFBK, Sacramento---aircheck starts before the quake and we hear the first word, the anchor reaction and them sending both their traffic plane and a reporter, Gregg Fishman (who later worked at KGO) to the Bay Area:
https://pastdaily.com/2022/10/17/earthquake-october-17-1989/
What gets me every time is Dave Williams' genuinely shocked "NO!" when he first gets word that part of the Bay Bridge has collapsed.That is gut-wrenching to listen to after all this time (a third of a century last month!). I could only take 20 minutes of it. I was in Santa Clara when it hit, about 20 miles north of Loma Prieta, finishing up at work (across the street from where Levi's Stadium is now). My wife worked in downtown San Jose, a few miles closer to the epicenter. Fun night trying to rendezvous, get back up the Peninsula, and then calm down the family back in New York. Thanks for that trip down misery lane.
I can confirm what PTBoardOp said, KGO did manage to get back on air on reduced (10Kw?) power later that evening. Back then their transmitter site was staffed 24-7, and the transmitter supervisor knew his stuff. (I got to meet him once, wish I could remember his name.) So he/they jury-rigged a limited non-directional signal from the one tower that didn't snap, got back on-air to cover the story, and then applied for an STA from the FCC later.