KSAN (FM)

KSAN (107.7 MHz, "107.7 The Bone") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to San Mateo, California, and serving the San Francisco Bay Area. It is owned and operated by Cumulus Media and it airs a classic rock radio format. It also serves as the FM flagship station for the San Francisco 49ers Radio Network. KSAN's studios and offices are located on Battery Street in San Francisco's SoMa district.[1]

KSAN
CitySan Mateo, California
Broadcast areaSan Francisco Bay Area
Frequency107.7 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding107.7 The Bone
Slogan107.7 The Bone Rocks!
The Rock of the Bay
Programming
FormatFM/HD1: Classic rock
HD2: Sports (KNBR simulcast)
AffiliationsSan Francisco 49ers Radio Network
Ownership
OwnerCumulus Media Inc.
(Radio License Holding SRC LLC)
Sister stationsKGO, KNBR, KNBR-FM, KSFO, KTCT
History
First air dateApril 1, 1963 (as KUFY)
Former call signs107.7 MHz only
KUFY (1963–1968)
KVEZ (1969–1974)
KSOL (1974–1994)
KYLD (1994–1997)
Call sign meaningK SAN Francisco
Technical information
Facility ID14484
ClassB
ERP8,900 watts
HAAT354 meters (1151 ft)
Transmitter coordinates37° 41' 20" N, 122° 26' 11" W
Repeater(s)See § FM Booster
Links
WebcastListen Live
Listen via iHeart
Website1077thebone.com

KSAN has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 8,900 watts. Its transmitter is off Radio Road on San Bruno Mountain in Brisbane, California.[2] KSAN broadcasts in the HD Radio hybrid format.

History

KUFY/KVEZ

On April 1, 1963, KUFY signed on the air. It was the FM counterpart of KOFY (now KTCT), owned by Intercontinental Radio, Inc. While the AM station aired a Regional Mexican format, KUFY played beautiful music, mostly instrumental cover versions of popular songs along with Hollywood and Broadway showtunes.

Because KUFY played easy listening music, the call sign changed to KVEZ in 1968.

KSOL

In 1975, the station flipped to an urban contemporary format and took the call letters KSOL for "K-Soul."[3] The original K-Soul broadcast on 1450 AM (now KEST). KSOL became the first urban radio station on the FM dial in the San Francisco Bay Area. Local musician Sly Stone played a part in influencing the station to make the switch.

While KSOL managed to fend off competition from KBLX unscathed throughout the 1980s, KSOL's ratings began to decline due to competition from KMEL, then a Top 40 station which was slowly evolving in a rhythmic contemporary format before going in a mainstream urban direction. Eventually, the decision was made to end KSOL and its format. The DJs were notified beforehand and held a goodbye show to send off KSOL on February 10, 1992. The final song on KSOL was "Miss You Much" by Janet Jackson. Afterwards, KSOL segued into a 72-hour loop of "Wild Thing" by Tone Lōc.

KYLD

On February 13, 1992, at 3 p.m., 107.7 FM flipped to Rhythmic Contemporary, branded as "WiLD 107." The first song on "WiLD" was "D.M.S.R" by Prince.[4] For the first year and a half, the station retained the old KSOL call letters.

Allen Shaw's Crescent Communications bought the station in December 1993 for $13.5 million.[5] KSOL's call letters were changed to KYLD the following year. The company also purchased 99.1 in San Jose from Viacom, and began simulcasting KYLD's programming in the South Bay, in order to help fill 107.7's signal limitations. Program Director Rick Thomas and Music Director Michael Martin set a plan in motion to overtake KMEL; they came up with a strategy of playing "old school" and up tempo freestyle/dance songs like those heard on heritage San Jose radio station HOT 97.7. KMEL moved from rhythmic to urban contemporary at the same time, and the two stations battled with each other throughout the mid-1990s.

KSAN

At 12:01 a.m. on July 2, 1997, KYLD moved to 94.9 FM. 107.7 and 94.9 would simulcast until Midnight on July 7, when 107.7 FM, now with the KSAN call letters, began stunting with construction noises and song clips as a prelude to a flip to classic rock at Noon on July 11.[6]

On March 13, 2000, at 3 p.m., after playing "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" by Elton John, the station relaunched as "The Bone," playing classic rock with a harder edge. To initiate this change, the station played AC/DC "A to Z," all 154 songs the band had recorded at that point, aired in alphabetical order.[7]

Classic to Mainstream Rock

With the demise of rival rock station KSJO in 2004, the station adopted a mainstream rock format. The playlist shifted back toward classic rock in April 2017. Bands in KSAN's playlist include classic rock acts such as The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, The Who, and Led Zeppelin, plus Southern rock such as Lynyrd Skynyrd and The Eagles, as well as alternative rock, punk rock, and grunge like Alice in Chains, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, The Offspring and Green Day. In addition, the station also included hard rock and heavy metal music such as Rush, Van Halen, Metallica, Black Sabbath, and AC/DC. The weekday on-air staff at The Bone consisted of morning team Lamont & Tonelli, as well as Chasta, steve Seaweed and Zakk.

In early 2016, Steven Seaweed's "All Request Hot Lunch" was cancelled by the program director. In August, Lejf Jaeger left the Bone. He had been part-time weekends for ten years. With his departure, "Local Licks" was also removed from the programming. In April 2017, several classic rock artists were added to the playlist including The Beatles, Cream, and John Mellencamp.

Steven Seaweed retired on July 1, 2017 after 44 years of being a Bay Area DJ, the last 20 of which had been with KSAN.[8]

Sports

Throughout the NFL season, the station broadcasts San Francisco 49ers games. While co-owned KNBR and KTCT are the primary flagship stations for the team, KSAN also airs the games.

Booster

KSAN (FM) is rebroadcast on the following FM Booster:

Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
KSAN-FM1107.7Pleasanton, California28878185 (Horiz.)926 m (3,038 ft)DFCC

HD Radio

KSAN broadcasts in the HD Radio format with the following stations:

From 2016 to 2018, the HD2 channel carried the Nash FM country music network.[9]

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gollark: 4D display when?
gollark: Not a regular mouse one, you have to convert it, but it does if you've got it rightclicked.
gollark: It does.
gollark: What would be extremely neat is that + terminal streaming + probably some kind of raycasting logic so you could stream the terminals of nearby computers onto your overlay glasses, and then select terminals and send mouse events properly.

References

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