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Jose Mota joined the Dodgers Spanish-language radio broadcasts in 2022 for road games and from 2023 for most games. Starting with the 2025 season, former infielder Luis Cruz, joins the Dodgers as the team's new Spanish-language color commentator, succeeding Fernando Valenzuela, who died on October 22, 2024 before the Dodgers World Series opener.
Rev. Young Sun Lee serves as the president of the Korean Gospel Broadcasting Network, which owns the station. KGBN is one of four radio stations in the Los Angeles area that broadcast entirely in Korean. The others are 1230 KYPA, 1540 KMPC and 1650 KFOX in Torrance, although they have mostly secular formats. KGBN broadcasts with 20,000 watts by day
Albert John Williams obtained the construction permit for a new daytime-only radio station on 1460 kHz in Inglewood on August 1, 1957. [2] The station signed on February 14, 1958, airing a format of popular and semi-classical music; [3] the same day, KTYM-FM 103.9 debuted as a simulcast. It had a policy of no back-to-back commercials.
The broadcasts are called by Richard Choi and Chong Ho Yim. It followed the launch of Korean Los Angeles Lakers broadcasts on Time Warner Cable SportsNet, and the return of Korean-language radio broadcasts in 2013 following the arrival of Hyun-Jin Ryu. [8] In 2023, the Dodgers added Stephen Nelson as the new television play-by-play announcer.
The Angels Radio Network is a network of 7 radio stations that air Major League Baseball games of the Los Angeles Angels. As of September 2018 [update] , 6 stations broadcast games in English, while another broadcasts them in Spanish.
The station is owned by Audacy, Inc., and airs a rhythmic adult contemporary radio format. KTWV has studios on Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile district of Los Angeles. As "94.7 The Wave," the station was known for pioneering the smooth jazz radio format in the late 1980s. KTWV has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 58,000 watts.
Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League, since the return of the team to Los Angeles prior to the 2016 season. For FM listeners, games are also heard on KCBS-FM. [20] In the Rams' original Los Angeles stint, 710 AM (in its previous KMPC incarnation) was the team's radio flagship for nearly the team's entire first tenure in Southern ...
The station became KRLA, "The Big 11-10", on September 1, 1959, and quickly became one of the top radio stations in the Los Angeles area. The on-air personalities included Dave Hull (The Hullabalooer), [27] Emperor Bob Hudson, [28] Ted Quillin, [29] Rebel Foster, [30] Jimmy Rabbitt, [31] Casey Kasem, [32] Bob Eubanks, [33] Dick Biondi, [34] Sam Riddle, Dick Moreland, Jimmy O'Neill, Wink ...