KFOG
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KFOG/KFFG | |
City of license | San Francisco, California at 104.5 FM; San Jose, California at 97.7 FM |
---|---|
Broadcast area | San Francisco Bay Area |
Branding | KFOG |
Slogan | World Class Rock |
First air date | 1960s |
Frequency | 104.5 and 97.7 MHz |
Format | Triple-A |
ERP | 7,100 watts |
Class | B |
Owner | Cumulus Broadcasting |
Website | www.kfog.com/ |
KFOG is an FM radio station in San Francisco, California, broadcasting simultaneously on 104.5 and sister station KFFG 97.7 FM MHz. The 97.7 transmitter is located in Los Altos, California, and serves listeners in the South Bay, San Jose, California, and Silicon Valley who are unable to get a clear signal on 104.5.
The stations' format is classified as adult album alternative or Triple-A, an eclectic variety of blues, reggae, folk, pop, and rock music from the mid-1960s to the present, which they call "World Class Rock." Both stations are owned by Cumulus Media.
[edit] History
The station signed on in the early 1960s as KBAY and was owned by Kaiser Broadcasting, a company started by local industrialist Henry J. Kaiser.
The KFOG call letters have been around for decades, and were used when 104.5 played beautiful music. On September 16, 1982, they dropped the easy listening format for a unique blend of AOR. They called it "Timeless Rock", and it featured a wide range of music, from the psychedelic sounds of the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane to newer artists such as Prince, Eurythmics and the Thompson Twins. They avoided more commercial bands such as Loverboy, which were widely played on many other AOR stations at the time. KFOG's specialty programming included the nightly "Psychedelic Psupper" and the "Sunday Night Idiot Show", which featured 1950s oldies. KFOG was heavily inspired by San Francisco's freeform rock radio heritage, dating back to KSAN.
When KFOG went on the air, the Bay Area was deluged with AOR stations. KMEL was the established, tightly-formatted AOR station that had been playing rock since 1977. KRQR was the hard rocker in town. And KQAK was the newcomer, with a friendly, loosely programmed, personality-driven mainstream rock format. There were also two other rock stations in the South Bay - KSJO and KOME. And one San Francisco rocker, KSFX dropped out of the format in May of that year to switch to news/talk. Of all six Bay Area rock stations that were on the air in late 1982, KFOG is the only one that remains to this day.
The station has evolved over the years, but has now been airing an eclectic rock format for over two decades.
[edit] KFOG programming and promotions
KFOG has developed a reputation for being devoted to their community of listeners, whom they affectionately call "Fogheads." A prime example is the weekday morning show from 6 to 10 Pacific Standard time prize giveaways (usually concert tickets) are routine, and the guests (including San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who drops by about once a month) candidly field questions from callers and e-mails. The station also gives registered Fogheads first crack at tickets to private concerts, exclusive events such as Spring Break (when the station takes over Paramount's Great America for one day before the amusement park is open to the regular public), and other events.
The Station also holds a free concert, named KABOOM, at San Francisco's Piers 30 and 32 in the month of May. This is followed by a nighttime fireworks show synchronized to a soundtrack. The extravagant fireworks display draws over 350,000 people. The 2006 concert included performances by Los Lonely Boys and KT Tunstall.
Many of the concerts KFOG sponsors are also recorded for the KFOG Archives, a massive library of live performances that gets tapped once a year for a limited-edition CD called KFOG's Live From the Archives. No more than 35,000 copies of each volume are pressed, and all of the proceeds are donated to Bay Area Food Banks. Volume 13 was released in November 2006.
KFOG also has a history of playing various songs at the same time each week. On Friday afternoons at 5:00 PM PST, the station always broadcasts the song Smoke Two Joints by The Toyes.
In 2002 KFOG was the first in the nation to put its music on iTunes & on HD Radio.
- Dave Morey: For years, has been creating KFOG's 10 at 10, 10 songs from one year. Also does weekday morning show.
- "Big" Rick Stuart: Thursday evenings is KFOG's New Releases Thursday He is the DJ on weekdays from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m..
- Annalisa: Brings listeners Mid-Day Mind Games and My three songs Her show is on weekdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.. She also does Live from the Archives shows on Wednesday and Sunday evenings.
- Rosalie Howarth: Sunday mornings, and Sunday evening format includes: "Acoustic Sunrise and Acoustic Sunset" Syndicated across the United States: Putumayo World Music Hour
- Weekends include: House of Blues Hour, The KFOG Sunday Night Jam, The World Music Hour
FM radio stations in the San Francisco Bay Area region (Arbitron #4) | ||
|
||
(Arbitron #4) |
|
|
|
||
|
Satellite Radio Local Traffic/Weather: XM Channel 221 | Sirius Channel 156 |
|
|
|
|
|
Bakersfield AM/FM · Chico AM/FM · Eureka · Fresno AM/FM · Imperial Valley AM/FM · Los Angeles AM/FM Merced · Modesto Orange County AM/FM · Oxnard-Ventura AM/FM · Palm Springs AM/FM · Redding AM/FM · Riverside-San Bernardino AM/FM · Sacramento AM/FM · San Diego AM/FM · San Francisco AM/FM · San Jose AM/FM · San Luis Obispo AM/FM · Santa Barbara AM/FM · Santa Cruz AM/FM · Santa Maria-Lompoc · Santa Rosa AM/FM · Stockton AM/FM Victor Valley · Visalia-Tulare AM/FM |
|
Mass media in the San Francisco Bay Area: Radio stations | TV stations | Newspapers |