KFJC
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KFJC | |
City of license | Los Altos, California |
---|---|
Slogan | Wave of the West |
Frequency | 89.7 MHz |
Format | Variety |
ERP | 110 watts |
HAAT | 562.0 meters |
Class | B1 |
Facility ID | 22012 |
Transmitter Coordinates | |
Owner | Foothill-De Anza Community College District |
Website | kfjc.org |
KFJC (89.7 FM) is a non-commercial radio station in Los Altos Hills, California at Foothill College, using an open format that features a broad spectrum of music styles and public affairs programming. KFJC's broadcast is 24/7 in the southern region of the San Francisco Bay Area and Silicon Valley. The broadcast is also streamed over the Internet.
KFJC's mission is to be a conduit for new and interesting audio art and information. KFJC's music programming is largely oriented to recent material from many different genres. Most programs must play at least 35% (by song count) tracks from material added in the last 8 weeks. The station is licensed to the Trustees of the Foothill-De Anza Community College District and operated as a teaching laboratory for the Fine Arts and Communications Department of Foothill College. KFJC, as a community radio station, is almost entirely funded by listener contributions. The cost of running the station, which is staffed entirely by volunteers, is approximately US$100 000 per year. KFJC does have some underwriting from local business which provides the station with materials such as records, office supplies, and printing and graphics.
KFJC's Crown / PTEK 300 watt transmitter is located on Black Mountain, in the Montebello Open Space Preserve, south of Los Altos, California.
[edit] History
This section does not cite any references or sources. (June 2008) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
1959-1970
KFJC began broadcasting from a broom closet on October 20, 1959 in Mountain View, California at the old Foothill Junior College campus. The station was only allowed to broadcast from 5pm until 7pm Monday through Thursday playing "study music" and pre-recorded educational materials. KFJC moved to its current location in Los Altos Hills, California in 1961 when the new Foothill College campus opened. In 1965 the first rock and roll record was played on KFJC, causing the DJ Woody Muff to be reprimanded shortly after. But in 1966 Woody was rewarded. On April 2, the first rock and roll show was allowed to run on KFJC. It didn't last a year before it was forced off the air by more conservative staff members. By 1968, KFJC numbered 100 staff volunteers and was broadcasting from noon to 9:30pm Monday through Friday. Rock and roll was making more frequent appearances on the station. In 1970, KFJC hosted an open mike session during a nationwide student strike that had also shut down the Foothill College campus.
1971-1985
In 1974 KFJC began broadcasting in stereo after 15 years of mono FM broadcast.
In the early 1970s, KFJC was a randomly block-formatted station, playing mainly bubblegum top 40, specialty/ethnic, or progressive rock, depending on the disc-jockey. Airshifts were assigned by the program director, but the schedule was not strict i.e. the station would sign off and on depending on whether the DJ showed up. Record service consisted of a smattering of 45s sent from a few of the major record labels. In 1973 several of the progressive-rock oriented students became very involved and vowed to clean-up the lax formatting.
Throughout these years KFJC was run by students who were in a 2-year broadcasting program. After 2 years in the program, the student was obliged to "move on" to make room for incoming students. Approximately 80 new students signed up for the on-air class every year during this time! The program director and music director maintained a mostly Progressive-Rock format, using a "clock" showing when on-air breaks were to be taken and what announcements were to occur during those breaks i.e. The Entertainment Calendar, PSAs, or promos for the many station benefits that the staff organized. The clock gave students the feel for what professional stations would ask them to follow.
The program director and music director collaborated to create a playlist which was sent to the record companies (just as the professional stations did). This enabled KFJC to get great album service from all of the major and minor record labels for the first time. A system of noting time and date that songs were played was put into use to avoid over-playing the same songs. The playlist that was sent to the record labels was derived from these notations. Several ethnic and specialty shows were also part of the programming during these years.
Emphasis was put on developing a good sound--good enough to take listeners away from the professional stations (mainly KOME, KSJO, and KSAN). Jocks were encouraged to play songs and groups that were being exclusively played on KFJC. According to surveys conducted by KOME, KFJC had quite a following during the 1973-1975 era. The great enthusiasm generated by being part of KFJC successfully spawned a number of professionals directly from its airwaves. Jona Denz was hired as a disc jockey on KOME while still holding the KFJC Station Manager position. Wendy Hoag also joined KOME. Mike Danberger joined KARA. Chris Holt went straight to KEZR's engineering department. Former KFJC Station Manager, Wade Axell, went directly to KGO as a producer then bought his own station. Program Director, Terry Gillingham was hired as an announcer on KEZR and eventually bought his own station. Another P.D., Gary Lee Fazekas, took a job at KFMR. Steve Urbani, Steve Burrell, Tom Evans, and Judy Wasson started a station in San Luis Obispo. Kathy Roddy and Karl Jay Hess became popular at KFAT. Ted Brooks took a job as a studio producer. Mike Martin became KSAN's librarian. Joe Eick took a job at KFRC. Public affairs director John Kotter was hired by KLOK and KBAY to become production and program manager. Rock Dibble joined Capitol Records. Peter Napoli was hired by a radio station in Santa Monica as music director. Tony Mercurio was hired at a station out of town. Todd E Daniels was hired to work in the production department at KXRX. Hawkeye Joe Scott went to KXRX, KLIV then KLRB-Monterey, "Alice", and still works in radio. Kevin Ariente got a job at KXRX as board op/talk show producer. Janie Freeman got a job at KPEN. Sandy Althaus became (and still is) an on-air personality at KQED-FM. Kerry Loewen was hired by KSJO as host of the "Modern Humans". Loewen was succeeded by Teresa "Trash" Heinrich at KSJO. Quarter after quarter, radio stations hired members of KFJC to paying jobs.
The format clock eventually became very tight, with an ensuing restricted sound. In late 1978, five student managers decided to restore the music format to again include punk/new-wave--this time, emphasizing the genre. They voted out the General Manager, John Low. DJs were now encouraged to play "alternate" tracks from bands like the Ramones, Elvis Costello, and the Clash i.e. songs that weren't being played by the professional stations (KSJO, KOME, and KSAN). Influential players during this phase were General Manager Kerry Loewen, Music Director Bob Gibson, Program Director Robert "Quasimoto" Zepernick, News Director Teresa "Trash" Heinrich, Kevin "LION!" Hardiman, Todd E. Daniels, Boris Darling, Bob "Bleedin' Gums" Gaynor, Kevin "Animal" Ariente, Bryce Canyon, Charles Hutchinson, Angstmaster Fast Max, Elmo C. Esta, Anita Plep, Paul Kiely, Doc Pelzel and the Duck from Columbia.
In 1980 KFJC upgraded its transmitter from 10 to 250 watts, expanding its broadcasting range. In 1981, KFJC started the annual tradition of the 'Month of Mayhem' in which the month is filled with special programming from increased live mics to in-depth coverage of artists.
At 6 p.m. on August 19, 1983, the station started playing variations of Louie Louie. The event, known as Maximum Louie Louie saw 823 versions of the song played over the course of 63 hours. The escapade was the result of a competition between Bay Area radio stations. It was covered by Bay Area media and featured in The Wall Street Journal.
In 1984 the KFJC studios were enlarged and received a bathroom, much to the delight of the DJs.
KFJC started to become a "major player" in the record industry, with several staffers going onto label/promo jobs. The yearly pilgrimages to the CMJ Convention in New York City started around this time, and the West Coast interlopers from "The Wave of The West" literally made their mark on the Big Apple, for example: when CBGB's closed, photos were taken for a tribute book, and over the ladies' room sink was the distinctive red, black & white triangle logo sticker, allegedly affixed there by former Promotions Director Tracie Jarosh ("Sarah Barhear/Nacny Sin")!
(1984 through '86 to be edited, eventually---watch this space!)
1986-2000
(more to be entered here, whenever SOMeONE gets around to it)
Until the late 80's, the General Manager duties were handled mostly by Robert Zepernick, aka "Ransome Youth" (formerly "Quasimodo"). Jeff Cloninger won the GM election in 1984, but stepped down after accepting a job in the broadcast industry, and Zepernick took the station's helm again. He was succeeded by John Porter ("P. Boy"), who had a very brief reign (one year), who was in turn replaced by Music Director Doug Kelly ("Hank Stamper"), from 1989-91.
In 1991, "Hawkeye Joe" Scott, who had held a variety of management positions (Chief Announcer, News/Public Affairs Director, Promotions Director & two one-month stints for two different GMs as Program Director) was elected General Manager, a position he held until 1993. He had left KFJC for commercial radio several times, but by his own admission, kept returning to KFJC "because there's no other radio station in the world where I can be this nutty and have this much fun!". Scott, who had wanted to be in radio ever since he was a boy, split his duties as G.M. and as the acerbic, Alex Bennett-bashing (and sometimes bibulous) morning host of "The Lose-Your-Breakfast Club".
Scott's "loose cannon" style of management didn't necessarily sit well with all staff members, but he encouraged diversity, merriment & "happy chaos", and the listeners heard it. During that time, and into the next G.M.'s shift, KFJC was nominated for several Gavin "College Radio Station Of The Year" awards. KFJC also won a "Donahue" award from the SF Radio Coalition, and shared a Billboard "College Station of The Year" award, resulting in its first-ever live broadcast from the East Coast. KFJC also resumed live remote broadcasts from all sorts of locations, kicking off with a "Battle Of The Morning DJs". This consisted of an entire month of Don Harrison ("Mark Darms") and "Hawkeye Joe" trading off their respective Monday/Tuesday 6-10am slots ('LYB Club' vs. 'Relish it!'). The re-inaguration of station live remotes was from the parking lot of a local underwriter, Olivari Donuts in Mounatin View. Eventually, Scott's other duties as "Sunday Funnies" producer at KNEW, and Promotions Intern at KSAN, and other aspects of his personal life resulted in the end of his "reign of terror", as he later jokingly called it.
In 1993, a new administration took over, under the leadership of Steve Taiclet (General Manager from 1993-6 and 2000-4), and a series of major changes began. Annual on-air fund raisers were initiated in order to underwrite KFJC's basic needs and, more importantly, to fund many much needed technological improvements. As part of these annual on-air fund raisers, the "Penny Pitch" was born. During the "Penny Pitch," KFJC staff go out into the community with live broadcasts and ask for spare pocket change. This is a chance to meet the faces behind the microphones and occasionally hear live bands. 1994 brought the first KFJC CD release, "Summer Surf." This was the first in a long line of CDs created at KFJC issued during the annual fund-raiser. As a result of the technological improvements made possible by successful fund raisers, in 1996 KFJC went international, with live broadcasts from Brixton, England of live sets from Ascension, the Bevis Frond, Ramleh and the Shadow Ring over two weekends. In that year, KFJC also began streaming over the Internet. The 'lower' production studio was remodeled over the summer of 1996, with a custom-made desk replacing the original card table. KFJC's next international broadcasts occurred in 2000, when the staff went to Dunedin, New Zealand for 6 nightly broadcasts of the "Dunedin Sound" showcase at the Otago Festival Of The Arts. These broadcasts featured performances by such legendary underground groups as the Clean, the Chills, the Dead C., Alastair Galbraith, the Renderers, Snapper, and the Verlaines. The following year, a double CD documenting these broadcasts was produced for the Station's annual fund raiser.
2001-Present
As a result of continuing successful fund raisers, in 2002 and 2003 KFJC studios were upgraded again, bringing new equipment introducing digital broadcast mixers as well as a 24-track digital portable multitrack recording system. In 2004 KFJC celebrated 45 years on the air with an entire day of 45s being played on October 31. KFJC no longer focuses its efforts as being a training ground for students wishing to enter the broadcasting industry. Each show continues to have its own personality as determined by the DJ (with approval from the program director). DJs follow a moderately strict break clock and all shows (with the exception of certain 'specialty shows') must play a minimum of 35% of their content from recently added material - called the 'current' library. The exceptions to this policy are during 'live mics' when bands play live at the station in an area affectionately known as 'the pit', the occasional "Freak Week' of freeform programming, and the 'Month of Mayhem' (May) when DJs are encouraged to come up with original programming focused on a band, a genre or another creative theme. The station is preparing to move to new facilities within Foothill College, most likely to occur in 2008.
[edit] Fundraising
KFJC is listener sponsored and holds an annual fundraiser each October. They feature an annual CD, specialty T-shirts (which have featured designs by numerous famous underground artists such as, Kozik, Robert Williams, and the Pizz, among others), hoodies, girlie shirts and other paraphernalia which can all be found (year round) on the station's 'donations and swag' page http://www.kfjc.org/funds/index.php
[edit] External links
- KFJC 89.7 - The radio station's main website
- KFJC netcast - Listen to KFJC online
- Maximum Louie Louie - Information on Maximum Louie Louie
- David Plotnikoff, SJ Mercury News - KFJC circa 1990
- [1] - Information about a tribute show held on honor of the late Ken Hamilton, Music Director of KFJC, who died in a tragic auto accident on December 22nd 2000
- Query the FCC's FM station database for KFJC
- Radio Locator information on KFJC
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