That's a good idea! To me 101.9 will always be "KUTE"Don't get me started on the calls that 101.9 had between KEDG and KSCA.
That's a good idea! To me 101.9 will always be "KUTE"Don't get me started on the calls that 101.9 had between KEDG and KSCA.
I think you had too much coffee this morning! Your overreacting! I merely implied that I myself including members of my own family found those call letters "questionable" so I found it safe to assume that there might be others as well.When I express an opinion that has no citeable basis in fact, I say so. I don't hide behind verbiage such as "which some found questionable".
This is how rumors become "fake news". It starts with someone posting their personal view as if it were fact, and then the Internet spreads it around. That is the only reason I bring this up ... it has to stop, and the only way that it will is if all of us are more vigilant about not inadvertently starting rumors.
Just my opinion. Your mileage may vary.
I think you had too much coffee this morning! Your overreacting! I merely implied that I myself including members of my own family found those call letters "questionable" so I found it safe to assume that there might be others as well.
Likely a fill-in host on Westwood One Sports, 97.3 and 97.1 presumably both took the national feed all day for the holidayI drove down to TJ on the 4th to avoid the loud banging, when I tuned around the dial I noticed that San Diego’s 97.3 was carrying the same blather that was on Yikes! 97.1. Not sure what it was. It was around 11am to Noon.
It's pretty unbelievable they would just choose a name from listeners at random for a full powered FM in Los Angeles. Like they just randomly picked the most popular name for the format. I'm sure it was decided beforehand.I mean, there have been worse ideas.
True story:
Back in the 1990s, Clear Channel took 100.3 R&B Oldies and had a listener contest—"send in entries for the new station name and we’ll choose it at random."
(Yeah....sure.)
The announcement came: It was “MEGA 100”.
That night, Phil Hendrie did the first 15 minutes of his show on KFI about how relieved everyone in the building was that, miraculously, the winning entry just happened to be the number one name for that format on radio stations all over the country.
“I mean, what if they’d pulled out the random winner and it was “Asshole 100”? Man, we dodged a bullet!”
It would. But probably station mgmt had a lack of thinking it through. I'm surprised that the FCC apparently had nothing to say about it. After all there is no station with the call sign: KF-K !I am afraid that the first reaction by many would be to accuse them of antisemitism
I remember when they had that contest to name the station. They spoke to the woman who won on air. She said she came up with the name Mega after her church pastor gave a sermon called "God is Mega." I'm thinking the woman was probably a Clear Channel employee who was told to make up a good story.
It's pretty unbelievable they would just choose a name from listeners at random for a full powered FM in Los Angeles. Like they just randomly picked the most popular name for the format. I'm sure it was decided beforehand.
Reminds me of when Garry Wing bought KWXY and KKGX, and announced a website to vote for what the new formats will be. In the end, he admitted he already knew that it would be Standards and Talk. It was strictly to engage interest and attention from the public.
I did a genuine snort laugh reading this!“I mean, what if they’d pulled out the random winner and it was “Asshole 100”? Man, we dodged a bullet!”
My last high school in the United States in the earlier 60s was about 70% Jewish. Believe me, that derogatory term was used by non-shoes and was prevalent at the time. That was two decades after WW.II.Keep in mind that the slur being referenced was used during and just after WWII, some 80 years ago. Most of the people of that era have passed on, and not all have explained to their own offspring why the word is offensive. That said, I do know some who have, and would take offense today, if they heard the word in question pronounced as it was during WWII. Fortunately, all of the radio stations I know of who have callsigns that could be pronounced as the offending word do not pronounce it that way, and they don't go out of their way to try to offend the group the slur is being aimed at.
Please… that HAD to be pronounced as kay-lite. The hyphen was not optional.Lufkin, Texas is ~120 miles northeast of Houston, ~100 miles southwest of Shreveport, Louisiana (and, incredibly, ~60 miles from Palestine). Those first two are probably the closest places where you can find a synagogue or any significant population of Jews. So KYKS is probably safe from offending any locals. (And for all we know, they might bury the calls in their TOH ID and never say them any other time on air.)
But is it possible no one there ever noticed the alternate pronunciation of those calls? Yeah, possible, but I doubt it. More likely it's the kind of inside joke that people snicker about when they are among friends or co-workers. You may not notice it immediately, but one would have to be pretty dense to say those calls day after day and not have it eventually invade your consciousness.
I had a morning guy on WQII in San Juan decades ago, whose name was Enrique Cruz. But he went by. K—e Cruz with a “k” in there. Not the more proper Quique Cruz. He finally accepted the mor correct spelling when he became an anchor at WAPA TV.There used to be a station in Orange County here in SoCal called "Kick-FM" at 94.3. Their calls were KIKF which some found questionable.
It might sound trivial to some, but I really wish a certain Dodgers ball player would change the spilling of his nickname to Qui-Que instead of well you know...
It's particularly disturbing when i've seen some fans at the stadium wear a Dodgers jersey or a shirt that just has K..E on the back!