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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 ...
94.9 KYLD San Francisco (Contemporary hit radio) 95.3 KJLV San Jose ; 95.7 KGMZ-FM San Francisco ; 96.1 KSQQ Morgan Hill (Sing Tao Chinese Radio) 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)
WBHJ – 95.7 Jamz – Rhythmic contemporary hit radio (Urban contemporary hit radio) WBHK – 98.7 Kiss FM – Urban adult contemporary; WMJJ-HD2 – 104.1 The Beat – Mainstream urban; WUHT – Hot 107.7 – Urban adult contemporary; WERC-HD2 – Hallelujah 105.1 – Urban contemporary gospel; WERC-HD3 – B106.5 – Urban adult contemporary
The Dog House is an American radio talk show that was originally hosted by JV (Jeff Vandergrift) and co-hosted by Elvis (Dan Lay). The show was previously based in New York City on 92.3 Free FM, and prior to that aired on Clear Channel's Wild 94.9 in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Between 1998 and 2004, 92.1 was KFJO, simulcasting 92.3 FM KSJO San Jose, as 92 KSJO, along with 92.7 FM KXJO in San Francisco and 92.7 FM KMJO in Santa Cruz. It briefly spent time as KABL-FM . It simulcast KABL 960 (now KNEW ), which was a long-time adult standards station in the Bay Area.
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.
KUFX was originally located at 94.5 FM, then 104.9 FM, and moved to 98.5 FM on June 19, 1998. [3] Before this, the 98.5 frequency was the longtime home to KOME, which is best remembered as a major Bay Area AOR station throughout the 1970s and into the 1990s.
San Jose Broadcasting sold KXRX in 1978 to the Seattle-based Sterling Recreation Organization, a company with holdings in movie theaters and bowling alleys in addition to radio stations. [14] [6] With new ownership came programming changes. Following the 1979 season, KXRX lost San Jose State football broadcasting rights to San Francisco's KCBS ...