The rest of the schedule is nationally syndicated conservative talk programs: Brian Kilmeade, The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, The Ramsey Show with Dave Ramsey, Ground Zero with Clyde Lewis and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory.
Weekends feature some repeats of weekday shows, as well as Kim Komando "Somewhere in Time with Art Bell" and sports programming from SportsMap.
[3] The studios were in the former Salina Journal building at the southwest corner of Seventh and Iron, which today is a parking lot.
The station's call sign was originally KSJS - the "SJ" standing for the Salina Journal daily newspaper.
KSAL became an affiliate of the NBC Blue Network, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news and sports.
When network programming moved to television, KSAL switched to a full service, middle of the road format, with popular adult music, news and sports.
He began as a copywriter, putting together daily "logbooks" that tracked each day's broadcast from the moment the station went on the air at 6 a.m. to when it signed off with the "Star-Spangled Banner" at midnight.
A popular program of the 1960s was the Sonny Slater show, which featured musicians playing live at the studio at noon on Saturdays.
He was station manager for KFBI, which had remote studios on the second floor of the Fox-Watson Theatre in Salina in the mid-late 1930s.