Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
John Kobylt (left) and Ken Chiampou. The John and Ken Show was an American talk radio show, hosted by John Chester Kobylt and Kenneth Robertson Chiampou.The show aired Monday thru Friday, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Pacific Time on KFI AM 640, a local Southern California talk radio station. [1]
KFI (640 AM) is a radio station in Los Angeles, California, owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc. It began operations in 1922 and became one of the first high-powered, clear-channel Class A stations.
From 1990 to 1993, Elmer and Tracey Miller co-hosted KFI's TNT in the Morning, the first morning-drive show in a major market to feature two women in the lead roles.. From 1993 until her departure from KFI in December 2011, Elmer handled news during KFI's afternoon "drive time" and participated with the hosts of The John and Ken Show to the extent that she was a virtual sidekick on that ...
Radio and podcast giant iHeartMedia has laid off 13 employees at KFI-AM (640), cutting the news staff of the Los Angeles radio station in half. KFI-AM (640) news director Chris Little, who was ...
Suits announced December 31, 2007 that he had accepted a position from 7 to 10 pm, following John and Ken beginning January 2008 on KFI AM 640 of Los Angeles. In April he was joined by long-time friend and fellow radio host Lisa Kennedy Montgomery , and they performed the show together under the banner of "The Kennedy & Suits Show".
Stars are coming together to support Los Angeles at the 2025 Grammy Awards. Host Trevor Noah kicked off the show at the Crypto.com Arena on Feb. 2 with a powerful monologue about the ongoing L.A ...
Two former KABC hosts, Dennis Prager and Larry Elder, were later syndicated on the Salem Radio Network; Prager is still heard on its Los Angeles station KRLA. The talk radio duo John and Ken (John Chester Kobylt and Kenneth Robertson Chiampou) came over to KABC to host mornings after they were released from the afternoon show on KFI. Their KABC ...
The term manini immediately came to mind when you reported 12 professional Los Angeles sports teams, each worth many millions, “donate(d) a combined $450,000” for the disaster in Lahaina, Maui ...