RadioStarOne said:I remember Doctor Don Rose commenting that five other bay area stations applied for the calls and thats why RKO kept them.
Was it when they changed to Magic 61 with new Calls?
RadioStarOne said:I remember Doctor Don Rose commenting that five other bay area stations applied for the calls and thats why RKO kept them.
MarioMania said:RadioStarOne said:I remember Doctor Don Rose commenting that five other bay area stations applied for the calls and thats why RKO kept them.
Was it when they changed to Magic 61 with new Calls?
michael hagerty said:KFRC applied for new calls when it became Magic 61, but changed its mind before the FCC said yes.
610 had the KFRC calls for 81 unbroken years...1924 to 2005.
As I was reading David's post, I could hear (in my head) the 70's Bobby Ocean saying "kay-eff-arr-SEEEEE." It definitely rolled off his tongue.DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:KFRC applied for new calls when it became Magic 61, but changed its mind before the FCC said yes.
610 had the KFRC calls for 81 unbroken years...1924 to 2005.
Even though it doesn't matter much now with PPM, still the KFRC callsign rolls off the tongue. There aren't many callsigns that do that -- KOIT, KNBR, KGO, KSFO, KCBS. But for the most part, callsigns get forgotten or misremembered. KALW has been around since 1941 and yet many people simply do not know the callsign because it doesn't roll off the tongue easily and the letters don't reference anything.
Why should it matter? Well, even in these days of PPM, I think a station can still gain listeners when the slogan or callsign is stuck in their mind. Even if they're just tuning around and they hear, "Light rock, less talk, KOIT" I think they might be inclined to stay. "Oh yes, that's KOIT; they play good music..."
And as I previously mentioned, longtime classical stations, KKHI and KDFC experienced big problems with people's memories. I mentioned that opera patron and opera composer, oil scion Gordon Getty, didn't even know the callsign of his favorite classical station, which was either KKHI or KDFC; he only knew it was "around the middle of the dial". The callsigns simply weren't memorable.
Lkeller said:As I was reading David's post, I could hear (in my head) the 70's Bobby Ocean saying "kay-eff-arr-SEEEEE." It definitely rolled off his tongue.DavidKaye said:michael hagerty said:KFRC applied for new calls when it became Magic 61, but changed its mind before the FCC said yes.
610 had the KFRC calls for 81 unbroken years...1924 to 2005.
Even though it doesn't matter much now with PPM, still the KFRC callsign rolls off the tongue. There aren't many callsigns that do that -- KOIT, KNBR, KGO, KSFO, KCBS. But for the most part, callsigns get forgotten or misremembered. KALW has been around since 1941 and yet many people simply do not know the callsign because it doesn't roll off the tongue easily and the letters don't reference anything.
Why should it matter? Well, even in these days of PPM, I think a station can still gain listeners when the slogan or callsign is stuck in their mind. Even if they're just tuning around and they hear, "Light rock, less talk, KOIT" I think they might be inclined to stay. "Oh yes, that's KOIT; they play good music..."
And as I previously mentioned, longtime classical stations, KKHI and KDFC experienced big problems with people's memories. I mentioned that opera patron and opera composer, oil scion Gordon Getty, didn't even know the callsign of his favorite classical station, which was either KKHI or KDFC; he only knew it was "around the middle of the dial". The callsigns simply weren't memorable.
He also did the VO work in the 90s for Oldies, but it was "KAY-eff-arr-see."
So I guess both versions are forever stuck in my brain.
HCochet said:MarioMania said:Does CBS hold the right to the old KFRC 610 Archives??
Like if CBS puts new calls on 106.9 and someone else get the KFRC calls
since you have an interest in old KFRC, I was wondering:
I remember in the very late 1970s (whatever year the song was hot) KFRC would play their own special version of "Fire" by The Pointer Sisters. Do you know the song? "I'm riding in your car, you turn on the radio.............."
EXCEPT when KFRC played it, the song went "I'm riding in your car, you turn on KFRC......."
Remember that? I wonder how many different stations they did that for and was that a common sort of thing. Did they get paid for it, or did they get more airplay for it (of course), but did they also get other songs played more often? A google search tells me they are from Oakland. Maybe being local (as far as coverage goes), they did KFRC only and enjoyed being on their (sort of) home station.
TeaPartyDude said:HCochet said:MarioMania said:Does CBS hold the right to the old KFRC 610 Archives??
Like if CBS puts new calls on 106.9 and someone else get the KFRC calls
since you have an interest in old KFRC, I was wondering:
I remember in the very late 1970s (whatever year the song was hot) KFRC would play their own special version of "Fire" by The Pointer Sisters. Do you know the song? "I'm riding in your car, you turn on the radio.............."
EXCEPT when KFRC played it, the song went "I'm riding in your car, you turn on KFRC......."
Remember that? I wonder how many different stations they did that for and was that a common sort of thing. Did they get paid for it, or did they get more airplay for it (of course), but did they also get other songs played more often? A google search tells me they are from Oakland. Maybe being local (as far as coverage goes), they did KFRC only and enjoyed being on their (sort of) home station.
The Jefferson Starship did a similar "custom (KFRC) version" of their song "We Built This City on Rock and Roll".
michael hagerty said:Bryan Simmons said:HCochet said:
since you have an interest in old KFRC, I was wondering:
I remember in the very late 1970s (whatever year the song was hot) KFRC would play their own special version of "Fire" by The Pointer Sisters. Do you know the song? "I'm riding in your car, you turn on the radio.............."
EXCEPT when KFRC played it, the song went "I'm riding in your car, you turn on KFRC......."
Remember that? I wonder how many different stations they did that for and was that a common sort of thing. Did they get paid for it, or did they get more airplay for it (of course), but did they also get other songs played more often? A google search tells me they are from Oakland. Maybe being local (as far as coverage goes), they did KFRC only and enjoyed being on their (sort of) home station.
It was customized for stations allover the country, but as far as I know, only in the major markets. I remember KFI having their own version as well. It wasn't an uncommon thing and had zero to do with the Pointer Sisters coming from the East Bay. Stations aired customized songs more than you'd think. It was actually done by the artist too, unlike what jingle companies like Reel World do with their fake intros to customize the song.
All true. But the Pointers did have a special relationship with KFRC. "Fire" was the second song they'd customized for 610. The first was their 1975 single "How Long (Betcha Got A Chick On The Side)"...and for that one, they did 6 custom versions...each replacing "chick" with a KFRC jock's first name ("Betcha got a Don/Rick/John/Chuck/Mark/Shana on the side, sure you got a Don/Rick/John/Chuck/Mark/Shana on the side, I know you got a Don/Rick/John/Chuck/Mark/Shana on the side...").
Each jock (Rose, Shaw, Flanagan, Buell, McKay, Shana and Sainte-Johnn) would play the version that mentioned their name.
And if I'm not mistaken, KFRC had its custom version of "Fire" two or three weeks ahead of KFI and the others.
1069_KIFR said:Added.
1069_KIFR said:KXXX X-100? Although it was actually 99.7