KABC (AM)
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| KABC | |
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| City of license | Los Angeles, California |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Greater Los Angeles Area |
| Branding | "TalkRadio 790 KABC" |
| Slogan | Talkradio with Passion |
| Frequency | 790 kHz (Also on HD Radio) |
| First air date | April 14, 1925 (as KFVF) |
| Format | News/Talk |
| ERP | 5,000 watts |
| Class | B |
| Callsign meaning | K American Broadcasting Company (former owner) |
| Owner | Citadel Broadcasting (Radio License Holing VI, LLC) |
| Sister stations | KLOS, KSPN affiliations = ABC News |
| Webcast | Listen Live |
| Website | www.kabc.com |
KABC 790 AM is a Los Angeles radio station, and a West Coast flagship station for the Citadel Broadcasting company. A pioneer of the talk radio format, the station went "all-talk" in 1960; it was one of the first stations ever to do so. This is one of many Disney/ABC Radio stations that has now merged with Citadel Broadcasting and remains an ABC affiliate to this day.
KABC first went on the air on April 14, 1925 as KVFV. On November 15, 1929 the station was sold to Earle C. Anthony, a local car dealer who already owned KFI-AM 640. He owned it until the early 1940s, when FCC rules changes meant no entity could own more than one radio station. While he owned the station, Anthony changed the call letters to reflect his initials, KECA. ABC bought the station in 1944, changing the call letters to the present KABC in 1954.
KABC has been the base of operation for many influential radio hosts, including early talk controversialists Joe Pyne and Louis Lomax, Ira Fistel, Michael Jackson, whose talk show attracted celebrities, politicians, and newsmakers of all types, pioneering radio psychologists Dr. Toni Grant and David Viscott, and more recent syndicated hosts including Dennis Prager (now with NewsTalk 870 KRLA and the Salem Radio Network), John and Ken (on KFI before their stint on KABC and now currently back on KFI) and Larry Elder. In the 1980s, Jackson, Grant and Viscott were also heard nationwide on ABC Radio's Talkradio network.
For decades, it was also the station of the Los Angeles Dodgers and their hall-of-fame broadcaster Vin Scully.
Though still a prominent Los Angeles station, during the past decade KABC's ratings share has declined; it now consistently ranks behind KFI, the other major talk station in Los Angeles.
In April 2007, administrators at Academia Semillas del Pueblo (ASDP) in the El Sereno community of North East Los Angeles filed a defamation lawsuit against KABC 790 AM and Doug McIntyre, claiming that the host of "McIntyre in the Morning" "targeted the school for destruction because the children were Latino, the teachers were Latino, the principal director was Latino," as stated in the lawsuit.[1] The lawsuit alleges that school employees received death threats and that the school was the target of a bomb threat because of McIntyre's extensive on-air criticism of the school, in which he accused ASDP of espousing a racist and separatist Anti-American philosophy.[2]
On November 6, 2007, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Ralph W. Dau took the case under submission, and it is currently pending in his courtroom.[3]
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Current personalities on KABC include Elder, Doug McIntyre, Bill O'Reilly, Peter Tilden, and Al Rantel. Imus in the Morning will air on KABC beginning on December 10. (A complete list of shows is in the next section below.)
KABC also has rights to Sunday night National Football League games from Westwood One. Starting in 2008, the Dodgers will return to KABC.[4]
Doug McIntyre (mornings)—occasionally fills in for Bill O'Reilly
Rod Marinko (news/"McIntyre in the Morning")
Jorge Jarrin (traffic)—his father, Jaime Jarrin, broadcasts in Spanish for the Dodgers.
The Radio Factor with Bill O'Reilly
Richard Santiago (news)
Sandy Wells (news)
Richard Santiago (news)
Paul Harvey (news/comment twice daily)
Al Rantel (mid-mornings/early evenings)
Larry Elder (afternoons)
Mark Levin (evenings)
Peter Tilden (overnights)
Moneytalk with Bob Brinker (weekends/financial)
Joe Aldeguer (weekends/financial)
Ric Edelman (weekends/financial)
Compound Stock Earnings (weekends/financial)
Leon Kaplan (weekends/automotive)
Dr. Gary Cohen (weekends/medical)
Chef Jamie Gwen (weekends/cooking)
Marc Cohen (weekends/computers)
Leo Terrell (weekends)
Tammy Bruce (weekends)
Rob Nelson (weekends)
Mike Walker (weekends)
Mark Isler (weekends)—occasionally fills in for Al Rantel
Nellkane Benton (community affairs)
Bob Anderson (community affairs)
Satellite Sisters (weekends)
Vin Scully—Dodgers baseball
Ross Porter—Dodgers baseball
Rick Monday—Dodgers baseball
Ira Fistell—who never liked computers
David Viscott (afternoons/deceased 1996)
Michael Jackson (mid-mornings/joined KGIL in 2007)
Don Drysdale (Dodgers/deceased 1993)
Jerry Doggett (Dodgers/deceased 1997)
Roger Barkley (mornings/deceased 1997)
Robert Arthur (mornings/deceased, date unknown)
Ken Minyard (mornings/retired 2006)
Joe Pyne (overnights/deceased 1970)
Ray Briem (overnights)—last known to be on KIEV-AM
Dr. Toni Grant (afternoons/in Dallas)
Dennis Prager (mornings/currently at KIEV-AM)
John and Ken John Kolbylt and Ken Chiampou (returned to KFI-AM)
Bud "The Steamer" Furillo (sports/last reported to be in Northern California)
Tom Hawkins (sports)
Kelly Lange (last seen on KNBC-TV)
Dan Avey (left the station 2007)
- ^ Academia Semillas del Pueblo and Marcos Aguilar v. Douglas McIntyre, ABC, Inc., et al., Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles, Case No.: BC 369626
- ^ Los Angeles Times, Apr. 19, 2007, page B4
- ^ Los Angeles Daily News, November 6, 2007, http://www.dailynews.com/search/ci_7385574?IADID
- ^ Los Angeles Times, Oct. 24, 2007, page D8
