KFSD

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Broadcast areaSan Diego County
BrandingSaint John Paul II Catholic Radio
LanguageEnglish
KFSD
Broadcast areaSan Diego County
Frequency1450 kHz
BrandingSaint John Paul II Catholic Radio
Programming
LanguageEnglish
FormatCatholic radio
Ownership
Owner
  • Raul Caro and Stephen Beuerle
  • (IHS Media)
History
First air date
1957 (1957)
Former call signs
  • KOWN (1957–1987)
  • KOWA (1987–1990)
  • KSPA (1990–2001)
  • KFSD (2001–2002)
  • KSPA (4/2002-8/2002)
Call sign meaning
"First in San Diego" (from 1926 when the call sign was on AM 600 KOGO)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID49205
ClassC
Power1,000 watts
Links
Public license information
Websitejp2radio.com

KFSD (1450 AM) is a radio station based in North County, San Diego, California. It is owned by Raul Caro and Stephen Beuerle, through licensee IHS Media, and broadcasts a Catholic radio format. The station's transmitter is located in an industrial park in Escondido.[1] KFSD is the only full-service radio station in IHS Media's Saint John Paul II (JP2) Catholic Radio network, which is also aired by low-power FM stations in San Diego (KCZP-LP 93.7), El Centro (KCJP-LP 95.7), and Brawley (K227BN 93.3).

From 2004 until February 1, 2007, KFSD was a classical music radio station.

KFSD stands for "First in San Diego," dating back to the first commercial broadcast license in San Diego. The KFSD call letters were originally assigned in 1926 to AM 620 (later 600). The KFSD call sign was on 600 from 1926–1963. KFSD was also on FM 94.1 from 1948 to 1963, then re-appeared on 94.1 in 1973 until 1997. The KFSD-TV call sign was on Channel 10 from 1953–1963. The three KFSD stations switched to the KOGO call sign in 1963, as information about San Diego and its people were fed into a new IBM computer and asked for the perfect call letters for these stations, and it chose KOGO.

The last iteration of KFSD-FM 94.1 was as a classical station. KFSD had a good solid audience, but the station was bought by Nationwide Communications (division of Nationwide Insurance). Nationwide felt a change to more aggressive music was a better choice for the only 100 kW station in San Diego. KFSD was changed to KXGL, and became the Eagle 94.1. The Eagle's format proved to be a failure, and in 1998 became KJQY/KJOY 94.1.

History

References

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