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From 1960 to 1973, the station was the radio flagship station of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team. KFI aired all the games as well as feeding the play-by-play broadcasts to other stations in the Southwest. KFI's founder, Earle C. Anthony, died on August 6, 1961. [39] In April 1972, KFI celebrated its 50th birthday.
Conway and Whitman was a CBS Radio evening talk radio program, web streaming and broadcasting throughout the Los Angeles and Orange County, California metropolitan areas at 97.1 Free FM (KLSX). The show ran from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Pacific Time, Monday through Friday, hosted by Tim Conway Jr. and Brian Whitman. After the March 2008 departure of ...
Handel currently hosts two radio programs on KFI in Los Angeles, California. First is KFI's local morning drive time show, in which he comments on current events. The program is one of the top rated morning programs in the Los Angeles radio market, with more than 1 million listeners. [1]
He garnered a large fan base there, and released three "Best Of" CDs, all of which benefited the Miami charity organization Center One. In 1996, Hendrie moved to KFI in Los Angeles to further develop his show and reach a larger audience. [2] In 1996, Hendrie became syndicated and eventually reached around 100 affiliates. [2]
The pair left WKXW in late 1992 to move to KFI to do their afternoon drive time spot, replacing former Los Angeles Police Department chief Daryl Gates. The hosts began national syndication in 1997, which displeased management at Cox Communications, then the owners of the station. At its peak, 125 stations carried the program.
Marc Germain (born May 28, 1967) is an American radio talk show host. He was previously known as Mr. KFI and Mr. KABC on his radio shows on their respective stations. He currently hosts his own internet radio show, The Marc Germain Show.
Garroway was the first "communicator" on NBC Radio's Monitor when the program first aired on June 12, 1955. [22] He continued as the Sunday-evening host of the news and music program from 1955 to 1961. [23] Garroway worked on the air at WCBS radio in 1964 and briefly hosted the afternoon rush-hour shift at KFI in Los Angeles in late 1970 and ...
The Chargers' official flagship station in Los Angeles is KYSR 98.7 FM, owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. [1] For the previous two seasons, the radio flagship was iHeart talk station KFI 640 AM. Chargers daily updates and specialty shows air on another iHeart station, Fox Sports Radio KLAC 570 AM. [2]