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KNEW
Broadcast areaSan Francisco Bay Area
Frequency910 kHz (HD Radio)
BrandingTalk 910 KNEW
Programming
FormatNews/Hot Talk
Ownership
OwnerClear Channel Communications
KIOI, KISQ, KKGN, KKSF, KMEL, KYLD
History
First air date
1922
Call sign meaning
K (W)NEW (former sister station in NEW York City)
Technical information
ClassB
Power20,000 watts (Day)
5,000 watts (Night)
Transmitter coordinates
37°53′45.00″N 122°19′25.00″W / 37.8958333°N 122.3236111°W / 37.8958333; -122.3236111
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitehttp://www.910knew.com

KNEW (910 AM, "Talk 910 KNEW") is a radio station in San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose, CA, USA. KNEW is the newest of the Bay Area's conservative talk radio stations, and is the flagship station of syndicated talk host Michael Savage. Talk 910AM is owned by Clear Channel. Prior to the format change, the station operated as CNET Radio, offering business and technology news 24 hours a day. Under that format, the station simulcasted nationally on XM Satellite Radio channel 130.

The KNEW callsign is a legacy of former owner Metropolitan Radio (aka Metromedia) which once owned legendary station WNEW in New York and modeled KNEW after that station as a personality-driven news and music station. When that format failed, KNEW switched to an oldies format led by program director John Hawkins, designed to bring back nostaligia for 910's earlier days as Top 40 rocker KEWB.

Prior to the KNEW and KEWB incarnations, the station was owned for 3 decades by Joseph R. Knowland, owner and publisher of the Oakland Tribune as KLX. Its transmitter is located in the Point Isabel area of the Richmond Annex neighborhood in Richmond, California on San Francisco Bay.[1]

History

KLX

KLX became KEWB on June 8, 1959, after 37 years of ownership by the Oakland Tribune. The station debuted, as KLX, on May 3, 1922, with 250 watts of power, from studios in the Tribune Tower at Thirteenth and Franklin streets. Power was increased over the years, eventually reaching 5,000 watts. In late 1956, KLX moved to the Bermuda Building on Franklin Street. In 1959 (in part to pay off campaign debts related to U.S. Senator William Knowland's unsuccessful 1958 California gubernatorial campaign), the Knowland family sold KLX to the former publishers of Collier's magazine (which had ceased publication in December 1956).[2]

KEWB

KEWB was operated by Crowell Collier Broadcasting (the former publishers of Collier's Weekly magazine) from 1959 to 1966. As memorable as its Los Angeles sister station KFWB, "Color Radio-Channel 91" is considered the launching pad for the radio careers of Casey Kasem, Gary Owens, Don Steele, and Robert W. Morgan.

Casey Kasem, who was also then known as "Casey at the Mike," after the famous baseball poem Casey at the Bat, had been doing celebrity impersonations and cartoon character voices between records. The KEWB program director told him to stop doing , and, left without a schtick as a radio DJ, he looked around the station for inspiration. Finding a bunch of Billboard magazines in a waste basket, he conceived of the idea of relating rock trivia to the audience between the songs, which led to the development of the successful format upon which he built his later career.

KNEW

In 1966, the station was purchased by Metromedia Broadcasting and changed the station's call letters to KNEW. What used to be a rock music station became a talk radio station. In 1969, the station coundn't compete against KGO and switched to a popular music format. The music format changed again, this time to country in July 1974. In the 1990s, the format became classic country. In September 1997, the station changed from local DJ's to Real Country using a national satellite feed. In August 1998, the station dropped country for simulcast with KIOI, an adult contemporary station. In 1999, the station began a satellite feed with CNET Radio.

Programming

Until recently, KNEW Talk 910AM's slogan was "More Stimulating Talk Radio" (matching Los Angeles sister station KFI-AM), and offers mostly syndicated programs. However, KNEW's mostly syndicated lineup is much different from the standard Clear Channel lineup, because rights to shows such as The Rush Limbaugh Show, Coast to Coast AM and The Sean Hannity Show are held by Citadel-owned KSFO. KNEW tried to gain the rights to Limbaugh several years ago, and in fact the entire talk format on KNEW was designed to lure him, but Limbaugh instead decided to stay on KSFO.

Programming heard on KNEW includes Armstrong & Getty, Rob Black, The Schnitt Show, Roger Hedgecock, Rusty Humphries, Lars Larson and Doug Stephan. As previously mentioned, KNEW is the flagship station of The Savage Nation, which is also KNEW's flagship program.

References

  1. ^ USGS, Information System, access date August 10, 2008
  2. ^ KEWB Channel 91 - Oakland - Airchecks and Jingles

External links