KSFO
KSFO is a commercial AM radio station in San Francisco, California. It is owned by Cumulus Media and it airs a talk radio format. The station's studios and offices are in the city's SoMa district. The transmitter is located off Amidor Street at the end of Islais Creek where it meets the San Francisco Bay. KSFO operates with 5,000 watts around the clock. However, at night, to avoid interference with other stations on AM 560, it uses a directional antenna.
One of two Bay Area talk stations owned by Cumulus Media, KSFO carries conservative syndicated shows, including Armstrong & Getty, The Rush Limbaugh Show, and The Mark Levin Show. KSFO is also the flagship station for The Savage Nation. Weekends feature shows on money, health, real estate, gardening, cars and home repair, some of which are paid brokered programming, including The Tech Guy and The Truth About Money with Ric Edelman.
History as KTAB (1925–1935)
KSFO first broadcast in 1925 in Oakland with call letters KTAB, a frequency of 1390 kHz, and 1,000 watts of power. KTAB stood for its first owner, the Tenth Avenue Baptist Church. KTAB's debut broadcast at 8 p.m. on August 1, 1925 featured a doxology from the church choir, classical music performancea from trumpeter Grace Adams East and others, and a speech by the Reverend George W. Phillips, the church's pastor. The Bureau of Navigation granted KTAB its first broadcast license on August 10, 1925, and KTAB began broadcasting daily from 1250 kHz eight days later. In its early months, KTAB had a noncommercial format primarily with broadcasts of church services.On March 25, 1926, The Associated Broadcasters, a company founded by Tenth Avenue Baptist Church attendees, entered a 20-year lease agreement with the church to operate KTAB. The Associated Broadcasters converted KTAB into a commercial station, and owing to the lack of U.S. Department of Commerce regulation of radio station wavelengths or power levels under the Radio Act of 1912, KTAB moved to a stronger frequency of 990 kHz in June 1926.
Following the passage of the Radio Act of 1927, in April of that year, the Federal Radio Commission relicensed KTAB to broadcast on 1070 kHz with 500 watts of power effective June 1, 1927. Following an appeal, the FRC allowed KTAB to broadcast with 1,000 watts on Sundays in July and August 1927.
After the Pickwick Broadcasting Corporation purchased The Associated Broadcasters on August 1, 1928, KTAB's studios moved from Oakland to the Pickwick Hotel at Fifth and Mission Streets in San Francisco on September 29, 1928. Around that time, KTAB moved from 1070 to 1280 kHz, before sharing airtime with KLX at 550 kHz on November 11, 1928. By early 1929, KTAB broadcast full time on 550 kHz after KLX moved to 880 kHz, and KTAB had an on-air backronym slogan, "Knowledge, Truth, And Beauty." KTAB moved to the station's present frequency of 560 kHz in November 1929.
Having operated the station since 1926, Associated Broadcasters outright bought KTAB from Tenth Avenue Baptist Church in early 1930, and KTAB began broadcasting at 1,000 watts day and night beginning in October 1930. On March 14, 1933, the KTAB studios returned to Oakland, this time at Sweet’s Ballroom, then at 1424 Franklin Street. Pickwick sold The Associated Broadcasters to mortgage banker Wesley I. Dumm and business partner Philip G. Lasky in the fall of 1933. The Dumm–Lasky group moved KTAB's studios from Oakland to the Russ Building in San Francisco. KTAB moved from a penthouse apartment to the entire 31st floor of the Russ Building on April 11, 1935.
History as KSFO
Early history as KSFO (1935–1955)
KTAB changed its call signs to its present KSFO and city of license to San Francisco on May 2, 1935. Some early programming on KSFO was rebroadcast from KNX in Los Angeles. National programs on KSFO included Alka-Seltzer Newspaper of the Air, Cowboy Church with Stuart Hamblen, and Father Coughlin. As early as 1936, KSFO broadcast Stanford University football games.On January 1, 1937, KSFO replaced KFRC as San Francisco's CBS Radio Network affiliate. Nearly seven months after the Federal Communications Commission granted a construction permit, KSFO began broadcasting at its current power of 5,000 watts from a new 389-foot steel transmitter at Pier 92 and Islais Creek. KSFO's studios moved from the Russ Building to the Palace Hotel on August 12, 1938.
After purchasing a stake in KROW, Lasky resigned from KSFO in 1940 to manage KROW. Effective December 31, 1941, KSFO was no longer affiliated with CBS Radio, after the network moved to KQW in San Jose. Going forward, KSFO had an independent music and news format. Just before the start of World War II, Dumm was tapped by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to use his KSFO facility to launch international shortwave broadcast stations KWID and KWIX. These stations became the forerunners of the Voice of America. Facilities for KSFO, KWID, and KWIX were located at San Francisco's Islais Creek where the KSFO transmitter continues to operate today.
KSFO again moved its studios in August 1943, this time to the Mark Hopkins Hotel, with which The Associated Broadcasters signed a long-term lease in 1942. In 1948, KSFO sought a construction permit to exchange frequencies with KQW, which then had a 50,000 watt signal at 740 kHz. The construction permit was withdrawn in 1950 after KSFO's new co-owned television station KPIX became a CBS affiliate. After nine years at the Hopkins Hotel, in February 1952, KSFO moved to a shared office space with KPIX at 2655 Van Ness.
On March 6, 1953, Don Sherwood debuted on KSFO as host of the morning show. KSFO's licensee was renamed San Francisco Broadcasters on May 25, 1954, in advance of the Dumm–Lasky ownership group selling KPIX to Westinghouse Broadcasting.
"The Sound of the City" (1956–1983)
In June 1956, San Francisco Broadcasters sold KSFO for nearly $1 million to Golden West Broadcasters, a company co-owned by Western movie actor Gene Autry and former football player Bob Reynolds. On the morning of December 19, 1956, AFTRA union members went on strike at KSFO after being unable to reach an agreement for a new contract. As a result, KSFO joined three other Bay Area radio stations, KLX, KROW, and KYA, in a collective bargaining agreement.Golden West launched a full service format that featured personality-driven middle of the road music programs, local news, and local sports. Additionally, KSFO's slogan was "The World's Greatest Radio Station." Its signature jingle, "The Sound of the City" with words and music composed by Johnny Mann, was sung a cappella by eight studio singers at the United Western Recorders studio in Hollywood. According to San Diego State University communications professors Joseph S. Johnson and Kenneth K. Jones, the jingle "has such a lovely melody and lyrics that station listeners request it, and records of the jingle have sold in music stores. Outside of San Francisco, similarly formatted stations adapted "The Sound of the City" for their markets.
Johnson and Jones observed that KSFO "always played from a wide spectrum of popular music" in a "free-form, but controlled" way, with "current hits, oldies, a lot of pieces from albums." Golden West turned KSFO into the most popular radio station in the San Francisco Bay Area. In the March 1964 Billboard radio response survey for San Francisco, KSFO was the top station among listeners for pop LPs, non-rock singles, folk music, and comedy; for jazz, KSFO ranked second behind KJAZ. By January 1967, RKO General's KFRC knocked KSFO out of the no. 1 spot in Bay Area ratings. Additionally, KSFO faced additional competition for its target 25-to-49 age group from FM progressive rock stations KMPX and KSAN.
From 1957 to 1980, KSFO was the radio home of the San Francisco 49ers football team, with Lon Simmons on play-by-play beginning in 1960. Both of the Bay Area's Major League Baseball teams had games on KSFO. From its first season moving from New York in 1958 to 1978, the San Francisco Giants broadcast their games on KSFO, with notable announcers including Russ Hodges, Lon Simmons, Al Michaels, and Joe Angel.
Jim Lange joined KSFO as afternoon host in January 1960. In November 1960, KSFO hired Al "Jazzbo" Collins, former host of NBC's Tonight. When Lange began hosting TV shows in Los Angeles such as The Dating Game in 1965, Lange moved to mornings on KSFO in order to accommodate his TV taping schedule. In 1968, KSFO hired Terry McGovern away from KDKA in Pittsburgh.
Beginning in the 1969–70 sports season, KSFO began 16 seasons of broadcasting Stanford University football and basketball games.
In response to market research showing that most of its daytime audience preferred watching television at night, KSFO hired John Gilliland in 1971 to host a five-hour variety block of music and entertainment evenings from 7 p.m. to midnight; Gilliland would continue as host until 1978. In addition to music, Gilliland's program featured the CBS Radio Mystery Theater, dramas and other serials from the Golden Age of Radio, comedy shows, and Gilliland's Pop Chronicles music documentaries. KSFO broadcast Mystery Theater so that local CBS Radio affiliate KCBS did not have to interrupt its all-news programming.
After a decline in ratings in the mid-1970s, KSFO began diversifying its music playlist. KSFO continued playing Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, and Peggy Lee, whose music had been phased out of many MOR stations. The station added tracks from Ernestine Anderson and contemporary artists like The Carpenters and Bette Midler. In the October/November 1976 Arbitron survey, KSFO was the most popular station among women aged 25 to 49 and averaged 10,800 listeners aged 18 to 49 per hour, between KCBS and KFRC.
The station's news department earned national and international journalism awards for coverage of the 1978 Peoples Temple mass suicides in Jonestown, Guyana and the assassinations of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk by former Supervisor Dan White.
Starting in 1981, KSFO was the radio home of the Oakland A's, with a broadcast team of Bill King, Lon Simmons, and Wayne Hagin.
Sale to King Broadcasting, simulcast of KYA-FM (1983–1991)
By 1983, KSFO's nighttime power increased from 1,000 to 5,000 watts, the same as its daytime power. In June 1983, Golden West reached an agreement to sell KSFO to Seattle-based King Broadcasting Company, which also owned KYA and KLHT in San Francisco, for a reported $8 million.At 12:01 a.m. on December 13, 1983, King Broadcasting officially owned KSFO and flipped the station to pop standards, a tribute to KSFO's popular format from those decades, aimed at listeners aged 35 to 54. King Broadcasting brought back former KSFO personality Al "Jazzbo" Collins from WNEW in New York City to host a late night jazz show. KSFO's studios were now at 300 Broadway along with King Broadcasting's renamed KYA-FM.
In July 1986, seeking to attract Baby Boomer listeners, King Broadcasting changed KSFO's music format to be similar to KYA-FM. KSFO played oldies from 1956 to 1973, while KYA-FM had a broader playlist with hits extending as late as 1980. By March 1987, KSFO began simulcasting KYA-FM, with breakaways for Oakland A's games.
First Broadcasting ownership, sale to Capital Cities/ABC (1992–1994)
On January 27, 1992, the First Broadcasting Company bought KSFO and 93.3 KYA-FM for $13 million. KSFO signed a three-year contract in May 1992 to broadcast University of California, Berkeley men's basketball games.On September 28, 1992, KSFO dropped its simulcast with KYA-FM and began a new format with oldies during the day and sports talk at night. Among its new programs were the syndicated Talk Sports with Pete Rose and Sports Byline USA. However, sports programming was short lived. In November, KSFO lost the rights to Oakland A's games after 12 seasons to KNEW. The following month, KSFO began phasing out all sports talk programming and added Wolfman Jack in evenings.
KSFO dropped the oldies format on September 20, 1993, for a talk format, with Gene Nelson and Peter B. Collins hosting drive time shows and nationally syndicated hosts in other times including G. Gordon Liddy, Larry King, and Bruce Williams. Around the end of 1993, KSFO disabled its C-QUAM stereo sound system.
Entering a local marketing agreement with Capital Cities/ABC Inc., which also owned KGO-AM and -TV at the time, First Broadcasting hired new president and general manager Mickey Luckoff for KSFO on September 1, 1994 and moved the station from 300 Broadway to the ABC Broadcast Center at 900 Front Street with the KGO stations. Rebranding as "Radio with Attitude," KSFO completely revamped its programming, hiring former NPR reporter Emil Guillermo as a host and picking up national shows The Dr. Laura Schlessinger Show, The Tom Leykis Show and The Fabulous Sports Babe. On February 14, 1995, the FCC waived its rule allowing companies to own only one radio station per market to allow Capital Cities/ABC, parent company of the KGO AM and TV stations that was already operating KSFO, to purchase KSFO from First Broadcasting. The FCC ruled that the transfer was "consistent with the public interest and would have no effect on diversity and competition in the San Francisco market." Subsequently, Capital Cities/ABC bought KSFO for nearly $10 million.
Launch of conservative talk format (1995)
KSFO launched its new conservative talk format on January 1, 1995. With the brand "Hot Talk 560" and slogan "The Station for Right-Thinking People," the stationintroduced a lineup that had J. Paul Emerson hosting morning drive, The Savage Nation with Michael Savage in afternoon drive, and syndicated shows hosted by Ken Hamblin, Michael Reagan, and Pat Buchanan. "In going conservative, KSFO follows a proven national trend, in which conservatives have come to dominate the radio talk show industry," observed Edward Epstein of the San Francisco Chronicle.
In addition, the new KSFO carried news updates from ABC Direction, and Stanford football broadcasts returned for the first time since 1984. Although KSFO initially won broadcast rights to the then-Los Angeles Raiders in late 1994, after the Raiders returned to Oakland in the 1995 offseason, other Bay Area stations began bidding for Raiders broadcasting rights. FM station KSAN and AM station KNEW won the Raiders broadcasting rights in 1995. KSFO also dropped Cal basketball after the 1994–95 season, with game broadcasts moving to Concord station KATD.
Only a month into the job, Emerson resigned from KSFO after his February 14 show, following controversy over allegedly homophobic remarks he made on The Phil Donahue Show calling on people with AIDS to be "quarantined." The new KSFO format's first Arbitron ratings in spring 1995 had a 1.2 share near the bottom of all San Francisco stations, while sister station KGO led the market with a 6.9. Lee Rodgers, formerly of KIRO in Seattle, became morning drive host in the May 1995, with Melanie Morgan as co-host. In October 1995, Geoff Metcalf joined KSFO.
Sale to Disney, growth of talk format (1996–1999)
After the Telecommunications Act of 1996 loosened media ownership regulations to allow companies to own up to eight radio stations in one media market, KSFO and KGO parent company Capital Cities/ABC merged with The Walt Disney Company and became ABC Inc. effective October 1, 1996.After a stint at KGO, Jim Eason returned to KSFO starting on July 15, 1996. After the 1997 season, KSFO stopped broadcasting Stanford football, which moved to upstart sports station KTCT, formerly KOFY-AM. A month later, a bipartisan group of state legislators, including State Senators Mike Thompson, Quentin Kopp, and Larry Bowler challenged KGO and KSFO hosts including Morgan and Metcalf to provide evidence that the state's new Smog Check II program would harm drivers in California, with allegations including that 60 percent of cars would fail the new smog test.
KSFO's Arbitron ratings rose from 2.2 in spring to 2.8 and 11th in the San Francisco market in summer 1996. Even with 1996 being an election year, KSFO's ratings declined to 2.4 in fall 1996 and 2.2 in the winter. However, KSFO broke into the top 10 of the San Francisco Arbitron ratings by summer 1997 with a 3.2.
Talkers Magazine named KSFO's Savage among the 100 most important talk radio hosts in the U.S. in its March 1998 issue. In a time period with the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal and a California gubernatorial election dominating the news, KSFO was a top-10 station in San Francisco's Arbitron ratings throughout 1998. KSFO continued to be in the top 10 in the spring of 1999 as the impeachment of President Bill Clinton took place.
Savage goes national and leaves, Brian Sussman joins (2000–2003)
KSFO added two new syndicated shows to its lineup in 2000, starting with Brian Wilson's nationally syndicated show. The Rush Limbaugh Show debuted July 3, 2000 on KSFO after KNBR dropped Limbaugh in order to create a full-time sports talk schedule. Talk Radio Network began complete national syndication of The Savage Nation on September 21, 2000. In February 2000, SF Weekly published an essay by former KSFO producer Samantha Spivack in which she recounted her experience interacting with whom she called "anti-fans" of KSFO in the Bay Area: "To be conservative, nowadays, particularly in San Francisco, is to be considered hateful.... KSFO Radio has been described in tones of hysteria as a cauldron of racism and homophobia, a wacko gun-nut unit, a nest of conspiracy theorists spouting political paranoia."Former KPIX meteorologist Brian Sussman began hosting evenings on KSFO in 2003. Also in 2003, KSFO dropped The Savage Nation on June 2 after being unable to renegotiate a contract with Savage and replaced it with The Sean Hannity Show. The Savage Nation moved to rival station KNEW a month later.
KSFO was also influential in the 2003 California gubernatorial recall election against Governor Gray Davis, with Morgan helping launch a fundraiser for a recall petition and interviewing recall advocates on the morning show.
Addition of Oakland Raiders and Mark Levin, sale to Citadel (2004–2006)
Beginning in the 2004 season, KSFO was the flagship station for the Oakland Raiders. Following a one-year contract in 2004, KSFO signed a contract extension in 2005.In February 2006, KSFO added The Mark Levin Show to its schedule. In the same month, Disney announced a $2.7 billion sale of ABC Radio Networks and 22 stations, including KSFO and KGO, to Citadel Broadcasting. The ABC Radio-Citadel merger completed on June 12, 2007.
Morgan attracted media attention in June 2006 after suggesting anyone convicted of treason be sent to the gas chamber, including New York Times editor Bill Keller.
Dispute with blogger (2007)
KSFO entered 2007 in a dispute with "Spocko", a liberal blogger who recorded KSFO talk shows and posted excerpts as examples of hate speech and eliminationist rhetoric, such as Rodgers advocating that a protester be "stomped to death" and Sussman challenging a caller to refer to Allah as a "whore." Spocko began a letter-writing campaign to advertisers on KSFO, alerting them to these examples and urging them to withdraw their support of the station. Some advertisers, including Netflix, MasterCard, Bank of America, and Visa, stopped running commercials on KSFO. On December 22, 2006, ABC lawyers sent a cease and desist letter to Spocko demanding that he remove the KSFO audio clips due to copyright violations. Spocko's Internet hosting provider 1&1 Internet complied with the cease-and-desist letter and took down Spocko's website.On January 12, 2007, KSFO preempted the Laura Schlessinger show for a special three-hour program where Morgan, Rodgers, and Sussman responded to Spocko and other critics. Sussman apologized for remarks highlighted by Spocko while calling Spocko's website "a complete abuse of the First Amendment."
Changes to morning show, end of Raiders affiliation (2008–2010)
KSFO made several sports and talk programming changes starting in 2008. Due to budget constraints that resulted from parent company Citadel Broadcasting losing over $800 million in the fourth quarter of 2007, KSFO declined to renew Morgan's contract after it expired on March 31, 2008.Several more programming changes followed. In early 2009, with Rodgers hosting the morning show only four days a week, Sussman became the morning show host on Mondays while keeping his evening show from Tuesdays through Fridays; KSFO added The John Batchelor Show to Sussman's former Monday night time slot. KSFO also began carrying the Hannity and Levin shows live in afternoons. Following the 2009 season, KSFO lost the Raiders broadcasting rights to CBS Radio stations KITS-FM and KFRC-AM. Meanwhile, declining advertising revenue and $2.5 billion in debt led Citadel Broadcasting to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in December 2009.
Sussman became full time morning drive host on February 19, 2010, after Rodgers retired. After nearly 16 years managing KSFO and over 35 years with KGO, Luckoff resigned from both stations on October 4, 2010. Luckoff told the San Francisco Chronicle that he had been considering leaving the stations since November 2009 and cited the bankruptcy and management decisions by Citadel as reasons for leaving.
Sale to Cumulus, loss of Limbaugh, return of Savage (2011–2012)
KSFO changed ownership in 2011 after Cumulus Media bought Citadel for $2.5 billion. The deal was made on March 10, with the purchase closing on September 16.On January 3, 2012, KSFO replaced The Rush Limbaugh Show with a local show hosted by J. D. Hayworth, a former U.S. Representative from Arizona. This move followed programming changes throughout local radio at the end of 2011, starting with sister station KGO laying off many of its talk show hosts. Limbaugh and some former KGO hosts moved to the newly branded "News/Talk 910" at KKSF, formerly KNEW. Morgan also returned to co-host the morning show with Sussman in 2012.
After Savage won a lawsuit against Talk Radio Network, Savage signed with Cumulus Media, and The Savage Nation returned to KSFO on October 23, 2012.
Return of Limbaugh and Cal basketball (2013–2017)
In July 2013, Morgan left KSFO for the second time, and Katie Green replaced Morgan as morning show co-host.From the 2013–14 to 2016–17 seasons, Cal men's basketball returned to KSFO for select games. In July 2017, KGO became the exclusive home of Cal sports.
Beginning September 29, 2014, the Limbaugh and Hannity shows returned to KSFO after their former Bay Area station, KNEW, changed to Bloomberg Radio.
On March 31, 2016, Cumulus Media announced that longtime KGO radio host Ronn Owens would move to KSFO as afternoon drive host, with KGO planning to replace Owens with all-news programming. However, four days later, Cumulus kept Owens on KGO due to language in his contract forbidding Cumulus from relocating his show from KGO.