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KSOL (98.9 FM "Que Buena 98.9 y 99.1") is a Spanish language radio station in San Francisco, California. KSQL (99.1 FM) simulcasts the station in Santa Cruz. KSOL and KSQL program a format consisting of regional Mexican music and talk shows. Both stations are owned by TelevisaUnivision USA.
KSQL (99.1 MHz, "Qué Buena 98.9 y 99.1") is a Spanish language radio station in Santa Cruz, California. The station simulcasts the signal of KSOL (98.9 MHz) in San Francisco. KSOL and KSQL program a format consisting of regional Mexican music and some comedy talk shows. Both stations are owned by TelevisaUnivision.
The station signed on for the first time in 1960, with the WFSI call sign. WFSI was owned by Family Radio and aired a Christian radio format.. On November 16, 2011, CBS Radio announced plans to acquire WFSI from Family Radio, with the intention of moving WLZL's Spanish Tropical format and El Zol branding from 99.1 to 107.9, with a new all-news format to be launched on 99.1.
WMEG La Mega 106.9 (CHR – Latin/American Top 40) WEGM La Mega 95.1 (CHR – Latin/American Top 40) WRXD Estereotempo 96.5 (Adult contemporary) WNVI Estereotempo 1040 (Adult contemporary) (owned by Aurio A. Matos Barreto) WZNT Zeta 93.7 ; WZMT Zeta 93.3 ; WIOB Zeta 97.5 ; WODA La Nueva 94.7 (Urban) WNOD La Nueva 94.1 (Urban)
La Radio de Sudcalifornia is the state radio network of the Mexican state of Baja California Sur. It broadcasts on seven FM and one AM transmitters in the state [1] with most content originating from the state capital in La Paz. All of the FM transmitters are on 99.1 MHz.
Current SBS President and CEO Raúl Alarcón Jr. Spanish Broadcasting System was founded by Pablo Raúl Alarcón Sr., who started in Spanish-language radio broadcasting in the early 1950s when he started his first radio station in Camagüey, Cuba, and his son, Raúl Alarcón Jr. [1] Alarcón Sr. had acquired 14 radio stations by the time he fled Cuba with his family to the United States in ...
The simulcast ended on January 6, 2014, when the Tropical format moved to 106.7 FM permanently, and the new WRMA at 95.7 FM flipped to Spanish hot AC. The new WXDJ began using the moniker "El Nuevo Zol 106.7". The move gives the Spanish contemporary format more coverage into Broward County than it had at 95.7 FM. [13]
The "WSUN" calls have been used in the St. Petersburg area since 1927, when WSUN signed on, then a time-share with WFLA.The station moved to its longtime 620 kHz frequency in 1929, and got the frequency all to itself in 1941, when WFLA moved to 940 kHz (then to 970 shortly afterward).