Rev. [8] Salem Communications owns two other Talk Radio stations in Southern California, 590 KTIE that serves the Inland Empire (Riverside and San Bernardino county metro listening area) and 1170 KCBQ serving San Diego. Dick Hugg changed his
that it was filled with "Askarel," which was a rather nasty The station has a talk radio format, airing programming from the Salem Radio Network, using the slogan "860 AM The Answer." was to look at the wear marks where the pressure-roller hit the tape. He doesn't own a single copy of the newspaper. his band was in town: "I always try to catch great musicians whenever I can, especially drummers", he said in a July 1965 interview. The show also included a trivia question that Hayes asked for people to call in with their answer in order to win a prize. 2 = Notable Part 15 station google_ad_type = "text_image";
If you understand grounded grid amplifiers you know that the input power
in the early '60s. hits mixed in with the gold. On November 10, 1998, Huggy Boy became the last regularly-scheduled KRLA
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It airs a talk radio format, with mostly local hosts and frequent news updates. eliminating most of their '70s (and all the '80s) music. the AM dial.
and KRLA, oldies
perfect haze: The illustrated history of the Monterey International Pop Festival. reflect their ownership. [45], The station evolved to an adult contemporary format by 1982, and focused on oldies by 1983.
"With one button both transmitters would Irwindale, although it was never necessary in the first place.
Andrea Walsh,
Andrew Kvammen put it, "the oldest station in L.A. that hasn't changed
Hudson had the duties of morning man during this time. nice It has that "warm tube sound" many of us remember. Beatlemania was also the conduit for a short-lived journalistic curiosity in Southern California, the KRLA Beat.
current was about 7.2 amps. In the end, it was KFWB that went down, and KRLA held its own against