Los angeles kfwb 980 am




















Animation regularly used KFWB as a running gag in its productions. It included six large studios, one of which was a seat theater, and a "multi-manual pipe organ, built especially for broadcasting. Another cartoon of the same year, The Timid Toreador, co-directed by Bob Clampett, shows an announcer broadcasting on this station, although the action takes place in Mexico. In , a KFWB personality, Al Jarvis, began playing recorded music, a rarity on radio at the time, where music was usually performed live.

It soon moved its studios off the Warner Bros. KFWB became one of the most listened-to stations in the Southland and a leader in the Top 40 format around the country. Paul Huddleston and Jackson King.

The station promoted itself with the slogans "All news, all the time" and "You give us 22 minutes, we'll give you the world", as first used by WINS, although KFWB's format used a minute news cycle. For the next 27 years, the two stations would be competitors, airing television commercials and sponsoring billboards, in an effort to be L.

In addition to being an all-news station, KFWB also had sports play-by-play contracts. With that, the slogan "all news, all the time" returned.

However, in , the NFL broadcasts returned for a brief period. In the early s, the station was authorized by the FCC to boost its power to 50, watts, using a directional antenna involving multiple towers.

But the power increase was short-lived. A few years later, new owners returned to KFWB's original 5, watt output, so the station could broadcast from a single non-directional antenna and take up less acreage of valuable Los Angeles real estate. This was due to CBS Corp. Stations are measured in "cumulative audience," or total number of unique listeners who tune in for at least five minutes per week.

This number can approach nearly 4 million listeners. In , Radio Disney on AM changed their format from pop music for children to country music. The children's pop format continues to be broadcast only on KRTH's In the peak hour of their daily broadcasts, they draw an audience of about one million listeners. In , then Los Angeles International Airport manager Clifton Moore came up with an idea for a radio station that would broadcast airport traffic information for visitors to LAX.

He thought it would help relieve growing airport traffic congestion. Radio engineers William S. Halstead and Richard W. Burden were brought in to put the project together.



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