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KEBR-FM 89.3 was originally owned by Family Radio, a Christian broadcaster based in Oakland at the time. [11] [12] The KEBR-FM call letters and format moved to a more powerful FM station on 88.1 MHz in Sacramento. KQED Radio changed the call sign on 89.3 FM to KQEI-FM. It became a full-time simulcast of KQED-FM in San Francisco.
MLB Network channel 89 will air select live games. ESPN radiocasts can be heard on channel 80 and some on Channel 81. ... Major League Baseball schedules broadcast TV radio internet web. Show ...
Pacific Time was a weekly radio program that covered a wide range of Asian American, East Asian and Southeast Asian issues, including economics, language, politics, public policy, business, the arts and sports. With news bureaus in Bangkok, Beijing, and Tokyo, [1] it was the only public radio program devoted to Asian-American issues. [2]
KQEH (channel 54), branded on-air as KQED Plus, is a PBS member television station licensed to San Jose, California, United States, serving the San Francisco Bay Area. The station is owned by KQED Inc. , alongside fellow PBS station KQED (channel 9) and NPR member KQED-FM (88.5) in San Francisco .
Forum is a two-hour live call-in radio program produced by KQED-FM, presenting discussions of local, state, national and international issues, and in-depth interviews.The program began in 1990 as a politics-oriented talk show, created and hosted by Kevin Pursglove. [1]
KQED-FM was founded by James Day in 1969 as the radio arm of KQED Television. On May 1, 2006, KQED, Inc. and the KTEH Foundation merged to form Northern California Public Broadcasting . [ 6 ] The KQED assets including its television (KQED) and FM radio stations (KQED-FM) were taken under the umbrella of that new organization.
One of Day's innovations at KQED was the local news program Newsroom, developed in response to a strike in early 1968 by San Francisco newspaper workers; Newsroom launched the careers of several broadcast journalists, and as the first nightly news program on a public television station, was considered a primary influence and forerunner to what ...
In the late 1970s, Krasny hosted a weekly Marin County talk show called "Beyond the Hot Tub" on low-power rock radio station KTIM-FM. [7] [8] He went on to host a popular radio program on KGO (AM) from 1984 to December 1992. [9] He became the host of Forum in 1993, expanding the focus of the program to more national themes. [10]