Bay Area Radio Stations
Spring 1966

This listing of San Francisco Bay Area radio
stations — as excerpted in a KYA Radio sales department
promotional brochure — shows a medium on the edge of transition,
with the AM dial still dominant as FM bides its time, still the
bailiwick of a select group of hi-fi enthusiasts interested in better
sound quality.
At this time,
Don Sherwood and KSFO are still market leaders, KFRC has yet to evolve
into "The Big 610" under the direction of Bill Drake, KNBR and
KCBS are still network-owned "full service" music and news
powerhouses, while their ABC counterpart, KGO, is on the air from 5:30
in the morning until one o'clock at night with its "news and
conversation" format.
On the FM
side, independent KMPX is mere months away from the arrival of an
all-night disc jockey named Larry Miller, the first voice in the
station's move toward the underground FM radio revolution; Tom Donahue
will come aboard shortly thereafter to speed the process along. KPEN, at
101.3 on the dial, is the leader on the local FM band, attracting
listeners who are drawn to the station's audio fidelity and the
innovations being rolled out by James Gabbert, Gary Gielow and Terry
Smith; the station would later become K-101.

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SOURCE: Bay Area Radio Museum Collection,
courtesy of Johnny Holliday.
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