KOIT(96.5FM) is acommercialadult contemporaryradio stationlicensedtoSan Francisco,California.The station has studios alongJunipero Serra BoulevardinDaly City,and transmits fromSutro TowerinSan Francisco,with a power output of 24,000 wattseffective radiated power.The signal can be received throughout theBay Areawith relative ease. There is also a booster station inMartinez,California called KOIT-FM3 that improves the coverage in theDiablo Valleyarea.

KOIT
Broadcast areaSan Francisco Bay Area
Frequency96.5MHz(HD Radio)
Branding96.5 KOIT
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatAdult contemporary
SubchannelsHD2:AAA"Highway 1"
HD3:BilingualSoft AC
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
July 1, 1947;77 years ago(1947-07-01)(as KRON-FM)
Former call signs
KRON-FM (1947–1975)
KOIT (1975–1983)
KOIT-FM (1983–2010)
Call signmeaning
TheCOITTower,a San Francisco landmark
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6380
ClassB
ERP24,000watts
HAAT480 meters (1,570 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
37°45′19″N122°27′10″W/ 37.7552°N 122.4527°W/37.7552; -122.4527
Repeater(s)See§ Booster
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Listen live(viaAudacy)
Listen live(HD2)
Listen live(viaAudacy) (HD2)
Listen live(HD3)
Websitewww.koit.com
highway1radio.com(HD2)

KOIT is owned bySalt Lake City–basedBonneville International.From 2007 through 2017, the station was owned byEntercom.As part of its merger withCBS Radio,the company was required to divest four of its radio stations in San Francisco in order stay within ownership caps. KOIT was placed in a trust and was subsequently reacquired by Bonneville, which had owned the station from 1975 until the sale to Entercom.

KOIT broadcasts inHD.[2]

History

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The station signed on the air July 1, 1947, under the callsign KRON-FM.[3]It was owned by the deYoung family, and was co-owned withKRON-TVand theSan Francisco Chroniclenewspaper. The station had a limited broadcast schedule (airing only during the evening hours). The station shut down on December 31, 1954; when it returned to the air as non-commercial station in 1957, KRON-FM began carrying an evening-only program schedule devoted to classical music. During the 1960s, KRON-FM devoted a full hour (7 to 8 p.m.) to a complete Broadway show album. Since the station had no commercials, no underwriters, and no on-air fund drives, theChronicleoperated the station as a public service.[4]Staff announcers delivered short newscasts on the station's evening broadcasts. In December 1970, KRON-FM began simulcasting a Spanish-language newscast from KRON-TV by Terry Lowry.[5]

In 1975, the deYoung'sChronicle Publishing Company,which was the then-parent of KRON-TV and theChronicle,sold KRON-FM toBonneville International,who changed the station's callsign to KOIT. On December 13, 1983, Bonneville purchased KYA (1260 AM) fromKING Broadcasting,changing the call letters to KOIT with 96.5 going to KOIT-FM per FCC convention. The KYA call letters remained in service at KYA-FM (93.3, nowKRZZ) and went into retirement in 1993. In 1983, KOIT was playing a lot of instrumental music, sort of like the "elevator music" that was being played atKBAY(then at 100.3 FM) in San Jose. The majority of the station's playlist consisted of instrumentals, but also contained some vocals. In late 1985, KOIT changed their music format tosoft adult contemporaryby dropping all instrumentals, and started playing music from the 1950s, 1960's, 1970s and 1980s. KOIT called their music "Light Rock". For the first 8 years of the adult contemporary format, the station was heavy onoldies.In 1995, KOIT updated their playlist by dropping the 1950s and 1960s songs, and added more recent and current music. As recently as 2009, KOIT was playing approximately one song from every decade in order in 3 song-sets. In 2009, KOIT started playing more recent hits from the late 2000s and early 2010s. Since 2003, KOIT has switched toChristmas Musicevery year, generally the Friday before Thanksgiving at 12:00 PM, and brands itself as "The Bay Area's Official Christmas Music Station."

On January 18, 2007, Bonneville announced a station swap withEntercom,with KOIT and Bonneville's other San Francisco area FM radio holdings going to Entercom in return for three of Entercom's stations inSeattle, Washingtonand Entercom's entire radio cluster inCincinnati,Ohio.[6]This trade marked Entercom's re-entry into the country's fourth largest radio market. Entercom officially took over KOIT-FM via alocal marketing agreementon February 26, 2007, and Entercom and Bonneville officially closed on the deal on March 14, 2008, with KOIT and the other San Francisco FM stations formerly owned by Bonneville becoming owned by Entercom outright. KOIT's AM sister station was concurrently sold toImmaculate Heart Radio,and becameKSFBin December 2007; however, KOIT-FM did not drop the "-FM" suffix until September 2010.

On February 2, 2017,CBS Radioannounced that it would merge with Entercom. To comply with FCC ownership limits, it was announced that KOIT, along with sister stations KBLX and KUFX, CBS-owned KMVQ, and a cluster in Sacramento, would be divested.[7]Under a local marketing agreement with the Entercom Divestiture Trust, Bonneville once again assumed operations of the station following the completion of the merger on November 17.[8]On August 3, 2018, Bonneville announced that it would acquire all of the divested Entercom stations it had been operating for $141 million;[9][10]the sale was completed on September 21, 2018.[11]

In 2020, KOIT, along with the otherBonnevillestations, moved their studios from theSoMadistrict in San Francisco into a newly built studio alongJunipero Serra BoulevardinDaly City.[12]

Booster

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KOIT is rebroadcast on the following FM booster:

Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP(W) HAAT Class FCC info
KOIT-FM3 96.5 FM Martinez, California 6374 3,300 (Vert.) 305m(1,001ft) D LMS

HD Radio

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On December 28, 2018, KOIT's HD2 subchannel changed their format from 1970s' hits (which moved toKUFX's HD2 subchannel) to adult album alternative, branded as "96.5 HD2".[13]In early September 2020, the format was changed to rock, branded as "Highway 1".

On May 10, 2024, KOIT's HD3 sub channel switched from year-round Christmas music to bilingual; soft adult contemporary, branded as "Bay Area Magic".[14]

References

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  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for KOIT".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^"HD Radio station guide for San Francisco, CA".Archived fromthe originalon 2016-09-16.Retrieved2016-09-04.HD Radio Guide for San Francisco
  3. ^"San Francisco Chronicle Launches Its FM Outlet"(PDF).Broadcasting. July 7, 1947.Retrieved2 October2014.
  4. ^Bay Area Radio Museum | History | Audio | Archives
  5. ^"Broadcast Legends - Terry Lowry".Archived fromthe originalon 2012-04-19.Retrieved2013-04-27.
  6. ^"Entercom trades radio stations".19 January 2007.
  7. ^Venta, Lance (October 10, 2017)."Entercom Narrows Down 16 Stations To Be Divested To Complete CBS Radio Merger".RadioInsight.RetrievedOctober 11,2017.
  8. ^Venta, Lance (November 17, 2017)."Entercom Completes CBS Radio Merger".Radio Insight.RetrievedNovember 17,2017.
  9. ^"Bonneville Turns San Francisco and Sacramento LMAs Into Purchase - RadioInsight".RadioInsight.3 August 2018.Retrieved9 August2018.
  10. ^"LMA Becomes Sale As Entercom Officially Sells Eight SF, Sacramento Stations To Bonneville For $141 Million".All Access.Retrieved9 August2018.
  11. ^"Consummation Notice".Bonneville Communications. September 24, 2018.RetrievedNovember 9,2018– via FCC.
  12. ^"They Built New Studios During COVID".4 September 2020.
  13. ^Bonneville Launches AAA on HD2 in San FranciscoRadioinsight - December 28, 2018
  14. ^Bonneville Brings Bilingual Magic to HD in the Bay AreaRadioinsight - May 10, 2024
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