KVTO
It is an affiliate of Cantonese-language Sing Tao Chinese Radio, and leases additional programming from other groups.
History
The station began in Berkeley in 1922 as KRE, the former callsign of a marine radio station aboard a World War I merchant marine steamship, Florence H., destroyed in an April 17, 1918, explosion at Quiberon Bay, France. The Maxwell Electric Company put KRE on the air on March 11, 1922, with studios and transmitter at the Claremont Resort Hotel. In May of that year, KRE was sold to the Berkeley Daily Gazette; the station was sold again in January 1927, this time to the First Congregational Church of Berkeley, which moved the studios and built a new transmitter. In January 1930, the Chapel of the Chimes (an Oakland funeral home) bought KRE; ownership passed in December 1936 to Central California Broadcasters, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chapel of the Chimes. New studios and a transmitter were built in 1937-38 at the foot of Ashby Avenue (601 Ashby) adjacent to Berkeley's Aquatic Park.
KRE-FM went on the air on February 14, 1949, with a transmitter on Round Top, a peak in the hills above Berkeley and Oakland in Contra Costa County. In 1950 the transmitter was moved to the site of KRE-AM in Berkeley.
In March 1963, KRE was taken over by the Wright Broadcasting Company of Paterson, New Jersey. Later programming was simulcast on KRE-FM and there were occasional AM/FM stereo broadcasts, including some classical music programming. KRE's call letters changed to KPAT in 1963, then back to KRE in 1972. The call letters KBLX were adopted in 1986, then changed to KBFN in 1989 and back to KBLX in 1990. The current call letters, KVTO, were adopted in 1994; the 1400 AM frequency was a simulcast of KBLX-FM 102.9, which was a sister station of KVTO until May 1, 2012, when Entercom Communications officially took over KBLX.
In the summer of 1972, George Lucas filmed radio legend Wolfman Jack at the KRE studios for the film, American Graffiti. (Some artistic license was employed for the movie: the Wolfman is shown doing his program live from California, although the Brinkley Act made such broadcasting illegal.)
References
- ^ "Facility Technical Data for KVTO". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
- ^ "KVTO Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
- ^ "KVTO Transmitter Site". FCCInfo.com. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
- ^ Fenwick, William (July 1928). "Broadcast Station Calls With a Past". Radio Broadcast page 150. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
- ^ Husband, Ensign Joseph. "World War 1 - Contemporary Accounts; The Story of the United States Naval Forces in French Waters". naval-history.net. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
- ^ Schneider, John F. "The History of KRE Berkeley, California". Bay Area Radio Museum. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
- ^ "The San Francisco Radio Dial on Various Dates 1922-1941". Bay Area Radio Museum. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
External links
- FCC History Cards for KVTO
- Facility details for Facility ID 28681 (KVTO) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- KVTO in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
- Facility details for Facility ID 144139 (K229DD) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- K229DD at FCCdata.org
- Sing Tao Chinese Radio (Chinese)
- Bay Area Metro Radio (Chinese)
- Bay Area Chinese Radio (Chinese)
- Global Chinese Radio (Chinese)
- The Peter Buhrmann Show