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KSJO (92.3 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to San Jose, California, and broadcasts to the San Francisco Bay Area. KSJO airs a Bollywood music radio format branded as Bolly 92.3. It is owned by Silicon Valley Asian Media Group. The studios and offices are on Hellyer Avenue in San Jose. [2] KSJO has an effective radiated power of ...
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96.5 KOIT San Francisco (Adult contemporary) 97.3 KLLC San Francisco ; 97.7 KWAI Los Altos * 98.1 KISQ San Francisco ; 98.5 KUFX San Jose (Classic rock) 98.9 KSOL San Francisco (Regional Mexican) 99.1 KSQL Santa Cruz (Regional Mexican) 99.7 KMVQ-FM San Francisco (Contemporary hit radio) 100.3 KBRG San Jose
KOME attracted a loyal South Bay rock audience throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s, against original San Jose FM rock rival 92.3 KSJO. Both stations managed to also serve listeners in the larger neighboring San Francisco radio market , against well-known progressive rock leader 94.9 KSAN (now KYLD ), programmed by Tom Donohue.
KIPR, 92.3 MHz at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, in the Little Rock, Arkansas area KTAR-FM , 92.3 MHz at Glendale, Arizona, in the Phoenix area, formerly "Power 92" then "Power 92.3" with the callsign KKFR KREV (FM) , 92.7 MHz at Alameda, California in the San Francisco area, formerly known as "Power 92.7" with the callsign KBTB
KPCR-LP (92.9 FM) is a non-commercial low-power FM radio station broadcasting an Alternative Rock/Indie Rock format. Licensed to Los Gatos, California, the station serves the areas of Los Gatos, San Jose, Campbell, and Santa Cruz. KPCR-LP is owned by the Central Coast Media Education Foundation. [3] [4] [5]
The format flipped to album rock on February 8, 1981. The station's first song in the rock format was The Who's "Long Live Rock". The station's new call sign was KOMP and it was known simply as FM92 K-O-M-P. Some of the DJs from that era included Big Marty and Leslie Blied, Todd Fowler, Dice Martin and Lark Williams. The station's slogan later ...
It paired them with its existing KSJO, a rock music station in San Jose, creating the "92-Rock Network"; [84] the station retained the KZSF-FM call sign until February 1999, when it changed to KXJO (matching KSJO as well as KFJO, the renamed KZWC). [85] Rapid consolidation in the radio industry led to more changes of ownership.