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"AM Stations in the U.S.: Oklahoma", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive Gene Allen. Voices On the Wind: Early Radio in Oklahoma (Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Heritage Association, 1993).
The heritage KOFM call letters were on an Oklahoma City Top 40 station on 104.1. KOFM dropped its format in 1986 to become AC "Magic 104" KMGL.The owners of Enid station KUAL (for "Quality Radio") saw a local opportunity for a better call sign, and switched their station from beautiful music to a top 40 format—and applied for the recently abandoned KOFM call letters.
KFI (640 AM) is a radio station in Los Angeles, California, owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc. It began operations in 1922 and became one of the first high-powered, clear-channel Class A stations.
John Kobylt (left) and Ken Chiampou. The John and Ken Show was an American talk radio show, hosted by John Chester Kobylt and Kenneth Robertson Chiampou.The show aired Monday thru Friday, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Pacific Time on KFI AM 640, a local Southern California talk radio station. [1]
City Call Sign Frequency Los Angeles: KYSR: 98.7 FM (new for 2020) KLAC: 570 AM (daily coverage, special programming & select game simulcasts with KYSR-FM that don't conflict with L.A. Dodgers and Clippers) San Diego: KOGO: 600 AM Temecula, California/Inland Empire: KATY-FM: 101.3 FM Yucca Valley, California: KNWH: 1250 AM Coachella, California ...
Radio and podcast giant iHeartMedia has laid off 13 employees at KFI-AM (640), cutting the news staff of the Los Angeles radio station in half. KFI-AM (640) news director Chris Little, who was ...
He was also a member of the board of the National Association of Broadcasters. Coleman is the owner of Team Radio Marketing Group, a holding company that operates KLOR-FM, KPNC, and KOSB. [2] [3] Coleman was elected to the Oklahoma Senate by defeating Amber Roberts in a Republican Party primary runoff election.
Channel 9 signed on the air as commercial station KFI-TV on August 25, 1948, [5] [6] owned by Earle C. Anthony alongside KFI radio (640 AM). [7] However, the station was originally licensed as experimental W6XEA about 1940, and in 1944 applied for the call letters KSEE (which are now used by the NBC affiliate in Fresno, California).