Lkeller said:recto101 said:Lkeller said:Lopaka said:To pursue the question a bit more, what would have been the origin of the calls KQW, KPO, and KGO? Or KRE or KYA for that matter.
In the early days of radio, most call letters were sequentially assigned by the federal agency preceded the FCC. There's been a debate about this between radio nerds, but I've found some historical resources that indicate that new station owners could request specific call letters. The first example cited was the Iowa banker who requested (and was granted) W-H-O for his new station in 1924. Examples in the Bay Area seem to be KFRC (initials reminding one of San Francisco), and KTAB which was owned by Oakland's Third Avenue Baptist Church.
But most new station owners just took whatever calls were assigned to them - and in those days, probably didn't realize call letters had marketing potential.
I heard that President Reagan worked for WHO in 1930's before landing at KFWB in 1940.
Yup. He was a staff announcer and did play-by-play for Chicago Cubs games. In those days, Des Moines received the game info by wire, and the announcer (Reagan) had to re-create the games' action and excitement while reading the wire feed. No matter what you think of his acting career (and many critics thought he was second rate), that must have taken some acting ability.
Speaking of KFWB, there have been debates about whether or not the station's call letters were issued sequentially or requested by the owners - the Four Warner Brothers. To me, that's a bit too much of a coincidence.
God help me, I'm going to use Wikipedia as a source (kids, don't try this at home):
Although some think its call letters stand for Keep Filming Warner Bros., actually the callsign was sequentially issued by the Department of Commerce, predecessor to the FCC (March 1925) at the same time as KFWA in Ogden Utah (Feb 1925) and KFWC for San Bernardino (also Feb 1925).[1]