Quantcast
Channel: Eric Brightwell
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 308

Los Angeles’s Asian Radio

$
0
0

Los Angeles is the world’s great Pan-Asian city, a melting pot within a melting pot. Arguments could be made for multicultural metropolises like Birmingham, Honolulu, London, New York, Toronto, and Vancouver which in some case have more numbers or larger percentages but none come close to matching Los Angeles’s sheer breadth and vibrancy.

In the Southland there are more than two dozen suburbs with Asian majorities, ten designated Asian enclaves, and the largest communities of Cambodians, Filipinos, Koreans, Taiwanese, Thai, and Vietnamese outside their respective homelands. There are cinemas which regularly show films from China, Korea, India, Japan, the Philippines, Taiwan (and formerly, one showing Vietnamese films). Local television stations broadcast programs from China, India, Korea, and Taiwan. And then there’s the radio, where one can audibly experience some of Los Angeles’s staggering diversity and, since this is Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, I’m here breaking down the Asian language offerings.

DESI 980 — 980 KFWB AM

D980-Slider

KFWB began broadcasting in 1925 and was for many of its years a news station. In 2014 it became a sports-talk station called “The Beast” which transformed into “Hollywood’s Bollywood station” in 2016. They haven’t posted a program schedule yet but every time I’ve listened it’s been Hindi pop music. And judging by the amount of autotune, most of it is pretty contemporary although I did hear a Lata Mangeshkar song from 1991 the other day.

KOREAN GOSPEL BROADCASTING COMPANY — 1190 KGBC AM

00

1190 KGBC is currently Korean Gospel Broadcasting Company. From 2001-2011 it operated as KXMX, which was an amazing multicultural station that broadcast programing in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Tagalog, Thai, and Vietnamese. It began, in 1959, as KEZY. Since 201 it’s been around the clock religious programming… but there are three other 24-hour Korean stations so secular radio fans read on.

RADIO JBC (JOONGANG BROADCAST COMPANY) — 1230 KYPA AM

568-172x172

KYPA began in 1926 as KGFJ, when it became the first station in the US to broadcast 24 hours a day. I can’t find a schedule online but rare is the occasion when I tune in and hear anything but DJs talking.

中文廣播電臺 (CHINESE RADIO) — 1300 KAZN AM

am1300

In 1989, KAZN was created by Dwight Case and George Fritzinger as the US’s first and only pan-Asian radio station and it used to broadcast programing in, I believe, sixteen different mostly-Asian languages. Now it is a 24-hour Mandarin station. It’s mostly a talk radio station but there’s music from Hong Kong and Taiwan on DJ 郭文斌’s 音樂地球村 (“Global Village”) and DJs 冰冰 and 果凍 host 全球華語風雲榜 (“Global Chinese Billboard”) on Saturdays at 20:00-22:00 and Monday-Friday at 13:00-14:00.

粵語廣播電臺 (CANTONESE RADIO) — 1430 KMRB AM

RADIOP

1430 KMRB broadcasts 24-hour Cantonese programming. It’s mostly discussion programs and news — which are no doubt possibly interesting to those fluent in Cantonese. More broadly appealing are the music programs. DJ 上山小麥’s 鋒尚音樂 (“Top Music”) airs Sunday-Thursday 23:00-0:00. DJs 梁少芯 and 文千歲 host 千連芯戲曲雅集, which airs Monday 20:00-22:00, Friday 6:00-7:00, and Saturday 8:00-9:00, is devoted to Cantonese Opera. 何可晴’s 流金歲月 (“Golden Years”) airs Saturday 7:00-8:00 and is focused on Cantopop from the 1960s-1990s. Finally, 蘇娜’s 音樂人生 (“Music and Life”) airs on Saturday 17:30-19:00.

SAIGON RADIO — 106.3 KALI FM/VIETNAM RADIO — 1480 KVNR AM

Saigon Radio Image-2

The FM side of the dial is a much less diverse place than the AM. As far as I know there’s only one station on the entire frequency band that’s not in Spanish or English — that’s Saigon Radio, which also broadcasts at 106.3 FM AND 1480 AM and was launched in 1995. I don’t see it on the current schedule but there have been mornings in the past where I heard a Japanese chat show aired on the station. The rest of the day is largely chat in Vietnamese but 1:00-6:00 and 14:00-16:00 and set aside for music. There are also weekday programs such as Folk Music With Co Hai Lan, which airs from 8:00-12:00, and Late Night Love Songs, which airs from 21:00-0:00. On Saturdays there’s music from 1:00-6:00, 14:00-18:00, Folk Music With Co Hai Lan airs again from 20:00-21:00 and Late Night Love Songs airs from 21:00-0:00. Sundays are apparently set aside for music all day.

라디오코리아 (RADIO KOREA) — 1540 KMPC AM

logo

KMPC first went on the air in 1952, when it began broadcasting as KPOL. It’s changed formats many times, often airing sports programming, at either times Spanish, and sometimes Spanish sports programming. In 2007 it was sold to Radio Korea. It’s mostly news and chat but Music Cafe airs from 23:00-2:00.

RADIO SEOUL — 1650 KFOX AM

1200x630bf

KFOX began airing in 1997 as KKJZ, as a simulcast of “adult standards” station KGIL. It switched to the Korean language Radio Seoul in 2001. Again I can’t find a program schedule online but although most seems to be talk I’ve heard Korean pop, Argentine pop songstress Amelita Baltar and Belgian chanson belter Jacques Brel — both of whom I nominate for inclusion into the “adult standard” pantheon.

*****

Eric Brightwell is an adventurer, writer, rambler, explorer, cartographer, and guerrilla gardener who is always seeking writing, speaking, traveling, and art opportunities — or salaried work. He is not interested in writing advertorials, clickbait, listicles, or other 21st century variations of spam. Brightwell’s written work has appeared in AmoeblogdiaCRITICS, and KCET Departures. His work has been featured by the American Institute of Architects, the Architecture & Design Museum, the Craft & Folk Art MuseumForm Follows FunctionLos Angeles County StoreSkid Row Housing Trust, and 1650 Gallery. Brightwell has been featured in the Los Angeles TimesHuffington PostLos Angeles MagazineLAistEastsider LABoing BoingLos Angeles, I’m Yours, and on Notebook on Cities and Culture. He has been a guest speaker on KCRW‘s Which Way, LA? and at Emerson College. Art prints of his maps are available from 1650 Gallery and on other products from Cal31. He is currently writing a book about Los Angeles and you can follow him on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter.

Click here to offer financial support and thank you!



Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 308

Trending Articles