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THE CALIFORNIA HISTORICAL RADIO SOCIETY
WELCOMES
THE BARHOF CLASS OF 2016

After 5,144 votes, the Bay Area Radio Hall Of Fame Class of 2016 has been selected. Here are a few photographs from the event, featuring BARHOF 2016 inductees, presenters and guests at the celebration:
 
 
BARHOF 2016 Group Photo
The BARHOF Class of 2016 Family portrait, with program host Celeste Perry (front left)
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BARHOF Executive Director Len Shapiro (left) with Class of 2016 inductee Kevin “The Rat” Radich
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Here are this year’s inductees:

Program Host – Dianne Nicolini – Midday announcer on classical KDFC since 1997. She also worked their briefly in 1995, and her other credits include KKHI for ten years beginning in 1983.

Program Host – Hoyt Smith – Morning announcer on KDFC since 1999. Bay Area listeners also know him from his work on K101, KNBR, KYUU, KLOK, and Smooth Jazz KKSF.

News – Wes “Scoop” Nisker – Scoop is fondly remembered for his innovative audio collages and news commentaries on KSAN in the late ‘60s into the ‘70s, and then, in the 80’s and ‘90s, on KFOG.

Sports – Kevin “The Rat” Radich of KCBS. He began by winning a contest on KFOG to be a sportscaster, moved on to KNBR and KGO, and is currently afternoon sports anchor on KCBS.

Executive – Dave McKinsey – The late Mr. McKinsey worked for KABL for 30 years, rising from copy writer to program director, and came up with the idea for the cable car bell ringing contest, which rings on.

Engineers – Robert Hammett and Edward Edison – Consulting engineers in the nationally known and award-winning firm they founded in 1955, called Hammett & Edison.

Specialty – Narsai David – Narsai is the long-time food and wine editor on KCBS, and also appeared on TV and contributed food and wine columns to local newspapers.

Pioneer – Wilda Wilson Church – Ms. Church provided radio drama programming to KRE in its earliest days, in the early 1920’s, and went on to produce shows for KGO and NBC’s Pacific Coast network.

Pioneer –  Dean Maddox was a popular personality and sportscaster in the 1930’s, into the ‘40s, on many programs and stations, including KYA in 1933, then KFRC and KGO, where he broadcast Sundays from the Cliff House.

Pioneer – Hilly Rose – A pioneering talk show host in the ‘60s on KCBS, where he began as a news reporter, and on KNEW and KGO before going nationwide, doing fill-in work for Larry King, Art Bell and others.

 

THE BAY AREA RADIO HALL OF FAME SELECTS

kya_montage_400w“THE BOSS OF THE BAY” KYA 1260 AM

AS LEGENDARY STATION FOR 2016

The Bay Area Radio Hall Of Fame (BARHOF), a program of the California Historical Radio Society, is proud to announce the selection of KYA 1260 AM, San Francisco, as BARHOF Legendary Station for 2016.

Even though KYA has been gone from the Bay Area’s airwaves since 1983, it can rightfully claim its heritage as the Bay Area’s longest-running Top 40 station, having begun its 25-year tenure in 1958. (By contrast, KYA’s chief competitor, the original Big 610, KFRC, lasted twenty years, from 1966 through 1986.)

Despite the high hopes of its owners when it went on the air ninety years ago – the station made its debut on Saturday, December 18, 1926 – KYA endured many difficulties early in its life, owing mostly to the economic conditions of the Depression era. KYA was rescued in 1934 by none other than newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, who aligned the station with his San Francisco Examiner.

A popular local favorite through the 1930s and 1940s, KYA entered its own “golden age” in May 1958 when it adopted a Top 40 music format, which skyrocketed the station’s popularity as the self-proclaimed “Boss of the Bay.”

Over the next quarter-century, KYA listeners were treated to a parade of hall of fame-caliber disc jockeys, including Tom Donahue (inducted into the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame in 2006), Emperor Gene Nelson (BARHOF ’06), Russ “The Moose” Syracuse (BARHOF ’08), Norman Davis (BARHOF ’14), Mike Cleary (BARHOF ’07) and Tom Saunders (BARHOF ’10), as well as Les Crane, Chris Edwards, Johnny Holliday, Tom Campbell, Peter Tripp and “Boss Radio” innovator Bill Drake.

KYA can also claim another significant link to pop culture history: fifty years ago, in August 1966, the station promoted and hosted the last live concert performance by The Beatles, at wind-swept Candlestick Park.

Although the original KYA faded from the Bay Area’s airwaves at the end of 1983, the station continues to hold a place of affection for those who grew up listening to the legendary “Boss of the Bay.”

CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE KYA COLLECTION on the Bay Area Radio Museum website. See the exhibits and listen to many audio clips from the “Boss of the Bay.”

 

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Sam
Sam
27 February 2016 6:35 AM

Happy to have been a tiny part of KYA history in the early 80’s!

Don Willian
Don Willian
5 March 2016 12:39 AM

I heard Art Finely had passed away …Mayor Art…One of my favorite radio personalities..You people must of not liked him as you never mentioned him…..

Mike Ervin
Mike Ervin
5 March 2016 2:47 PM

Great Rock station of my teen years even cooler later to find out I was working with a guy named Dave Ogilvie at a Tahoe Casino in 1988 who in 1970 was better known as Dave Stone on KYA…Dave got his big break working for Bill Drake at Boss radio in San Diego in the 60’s….David still works Casino Surveillance at Montbleu in South Tahoe….

Jon Winchell
5 March 2016 4:02 PM

KYA a historical radio station with Hall Of Famer Radio Announcers.

Tom
Tom
5 March 2016 10:00 PM

Interned at my dream station in 1977.

Terry Sullivan
Terry Sullivan
2 May 2016 7:45 AM

i was on the air there from 1959 to 1963, first as “Scotty Day” and then using my real name. Am still in touch with Norm Davis. who also was allowed to use his real name after first being assigned the air name “Lucky Logan.”

Vaughn Baskin
10 August 2016 9:46 PM

I Think that 106 KMEL should be in The Bay Area Radio Hall Of Fame as one the longest but greatest radio stations in Bay Area radio history.

June Devereaux
June Devereaux
29 July 2020 1:20 PM

What a great gift to hear the Sounds of the City again! What a rush of memories! Thank you, thank you, thank you for a very bright star in these rather dismal times.