KFSD

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KFSD
City of license Escondido, California
Broadcast area San Diego County
Branding Guadalupe Radio
Frequency 1450 kHz
First air date 1957 (as KOWN)
Format Catholic Religious (KSPA simulcast)
Language(s) Spanish
Power 1,000 watts
Class C
Facility ID 49205
Callsign meaning K "FM of San Diego" (from their sister station's FM 94.1 days)
Former callsigns KOWN (1957-1987)
KOWA (1987-1990)
KSPA (1990-2001)
KFSD (2001-2002)
KSPA (4/2002-8/2002)
Owner Astor Broadcast Group
Sister stations KSPA
Webcast Listen Live!
Website guadaluperadio.com

KFSD (1450 AM) is a Spanish Catholic religious radio station based in North County, San Diego, California. It is owned and operated by Astor Broadcast Group. From 2004 until February 1, 2007, KFSD was a classical music radio station.

KFSD stands for "FM of San Diego," dating from when it was an FM classical music station, broadcasting from the top of Mount Soledad (between La Jolla and Pacific Beach). At that time, its 100 kW transmitter (on 94.1 MHz) was the most powerful in the area. While KFSD primarily played classical music, it presented a complete range of broadcasting items: news, traffic reports, and (since classical music listeners tend to be upper class) stock market reports.

While KFSD had a good solid audience, it depended primarily upon locally-owned businesses for advertising revenues and, when many of those companies were bought out by national chains, the radio station was financially strangled.

The KFSD call letters were previously used on KOGO AM 600, as well as Channel 10, San Diego's ABC television affiliate (now KGTV). In the 1950s, these three broadcasters (AM, FM, and TV) were all operated by the same company; their call letters were changed as a result of a corporate breakup.

History

The station began life in 1957 as KOWN, broadcasting from studios on Hale Avenue on the eastern side of Escondido. In 1964, the station moved into studios in the then-new Escondido Village Mall, and added an FM station, KOWN-FM, on 92.1 MHz. Shoppers could look through double-pane windows to see disk jockeys spinning records and the state-of-the-art (for 1964) Shafer automation system which played easy listening music on the FM station.

AM and FM transmitters stayed on Hale Avenue until 1972, when they were moved to a new location south of the city.

Both stations moved again in 1974, to studios in the Vineyard Shopping Center on Valley Parkway, just east of the Escondido Village Mall.

KFSD changed ownership in 1996, and its format was changed a number of times, from classic rock, to soft oldies (unrelated to KFSD's current format). The 94.1 transmitter was renamed KXGL (now known as KMYI), and the call letters KFSD were transferred to a much smaller FM transmitter, 92.1 MHz, near Escondido, California, which now simulcasts KSON. The KFSD call letters were then transferred to a nearby AM transmitter on 1450 kHz, where it currently broadcasts today.

From February 1, 2007 until March 15, 2010 KFSD was a simulcast of sister station KSPA featuring a nostalgia format, with music from the 1930s through the 1960s. The current format quoting from their website is: "Our philosophy is to blend the enduring standards of timeless artists with bold new interpretations from the younger vanguard".[1] The simulcast began again on November 26, 2010, when the Astor Broadcast Group decided to drop KSPA's talk format to bring back the previous adult standards format. The format then continued until March 1, 2012, when it, along with KSPA, picked up the business talk format that had aired on KCEO.

As of June 6, 2011, KFSD has begun to broker time to San Diego Radio Seoul, who airs Korean programming weekdays from 6:00 am until 12 noon. Japanese programming also airs weekdays from 3:00 pm until 4 pm.[2] This programming arrangement ended on February 8, 2012, as KFSD will switch to a business talk format that it is inheriting from sister station KCEO on March 7, 2012, when KCEO flips to Immaculate Heart Radio programming.

In February 2015 KFSD changed their format to country, branded as "KOW Country 1450".[3]

On May 18, 2015 KFSD changed their format to Spanish Catholic religious, branded as "Guadalupe Radio".[4]

References

External links

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