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Swing Left has created sub-chapters, including 31st Street Swing Left, which focuses on the Maryland, Virginia, and D.C area; [7] 31st Street Swing Left focuses on funding campaigns of swing-candidates in their jurisdiction. [8] In May 2017, Onward Together named Swing Left as one of the groups whose work it would support. [9]
Until 1952, the FCC had allocated only 6 television channels to the Bay Area, but in 1954 KSAN [2] began transmitting on UHF channel 32 and KQED began educational programming on channel 9. By 1956, the Sacramento area had KCRA , KBET KOVR , and KCCC on the air, the San Jose area had KSBW and KNTV , and San Francisco had KRON , KPIX , KGO , KQED ...
California Music Channel (CMC) [1] is an American music video broadcast television network based in the San Francisco Bay Area. [2] It is one of the longest running local music video television stations in the world. [ 2 ]
The Hot Club of San Francisco is an American gypsy jazz band. [1] [2] Led by guitarist, songwriter, and arranger Paul 'Pazzo' Mehling, the group uses the instrumentation of violin, bass, and guitars from Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli’s Quintette du Hot Club de France and performs arrangements of gypsy jazz standards, pop songs, and original compositions by Mehling.
KCEA (89.1 FM) is a broadcast radio station licensed to Atherton, California, serving the San Francisco Peninsula. The station broadcasts a music format featuring big band, swing and adult standards in addition to local high school sports. [3] KCEA is owned and operated by Sequoia Union High School District. [4]
KCNZ-CD (channel 28) is a low-power, Class A television station licensed to San Francisco, California, United States, serving the San Francisco Bay Area.Owned by CNZ Communications, LLC, it is sister to Merit Street affiliate KOFY-TV (channel 20) and low-power station KMPX-LD (channel 18).
KEMO-TV (channel 50) is a television station licensed to Fremont, California, United States, serving the San Francisco Bay Area with programming from ShopHQ. [6] The station is owned by Innovate Corp. KEMO-TV's transmitter is located at San Francisco 's Sutro Tower , and is shared with KMTP-TV , KCNS , and KTNC-TV .
Grimes Poznikov (August 5, 1946 – October 27, 2005), known as "The Human Jukebox," was an American musician and entertainer, a fixture of San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a street performer , who would wait in a decorated cardboard refrigerator box until a passerby offered him a donation and requested a song.