City | San Bernardino, California |
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Broadcast area | Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange County, California |
Branding | K-FROG |
Slogan | So Cal's #1 For New Country |
Frequency | 95.1 MHz (also on HD Radio) simulcast on KXFG 92.9 FM |
First air date | August 1974 (as KQLH) |
Format | Country |
ERP | 50,000 watts |
HAAT | 149 meters |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 1241 |
Callsign meaning | K FRG |
Former callsigns | KQLH (1974-1989) |
Owner |
CBS Radio (sale to Entercom pending) (CBS Radio Stations Inc.) |
Sister stations |
KROQ-FM, KAMP-FM, KCBS-FM, KRTH, KTWV, KNX, KRAK, KVFG, KXFG, KEZN part of CBS Corporation cluster with Los Angeles-based TV stations KCBS & KCAL |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | kfrog.cbslocal.com |
KFRG (95.1 FM, "K-FROG") is a commercial country music formatted radio station in San Bernardino, California, broadcasting to the Riverside-San Bernardino, California, area. KFRG is believed to be the original "Frog" station under previous owner Keymarket. The brand name has subsequently licensed by Keymarket to dozens of American radio stations. Owned by CBS Radio, its studios are in Colton and the transmitter site for KFRG is north of San Bernardino.
KFRG was previously known was KQLH with a soft adult contemporary format. Due to strong competition from Los Angeles stations KOST and KBIG, KQLH was unable to succeed as an adult contemporary station. On December 25, 1989, KQLH flipped to a country format. The call letters were then changed to KFRG.
On August 17, 2006, KFRG became the only country radio station that could be heard in the Los Angeles area by default, as KZLA changed its programming format to rhythmic adult contemporary, until December 1, 2006 when KKGO changed its programming format from adult standards to country to fill a void in the Los Angeles area.
As a result of the void left by KZLA, KFRG briefly began showing up in the Los Angeles ratings.
KFRG has focused more on Orange County and Los Angeles area news and traffic since the demise of KZLA, but on February 23, 2007, KKGO moved its Country format and call letters to its FM sister station, thus bringing a full-powered FM Country music station back to the nation's second largest radio market after a six-month absence.