"The Drive with Carmichael Dave" airs from 6 am to 9 am. The popular nationally syndicated Los Angeles-based Jim Rome show airs from 9 am to 12 pm. CBS Sports radio’s "Tiki & Tierney" is heard from 12-3 pm. The most tenured show on the station was The Grant Napear Show with Doug Christie with Kings play-by-play announcer Grant Napear and former Kings player Doug Christie, airing from 3-7 pm. Grant was a staple of the station's programming from 1997 until 2020, when Bonneville fired him for insensitive remarks towards former Kings player DeMarcus Cousins in a series of Twitter feeds regarding the Black Lives Matter movement; Christie has been paired up with previous midday host Jason Ross since then. KHTK carries the syndicated Scott Ferrall show "Ferrall on the Bench" from 7-11 pm. Other CBS Sports programming airs overnight. Weekend programming includes CBS Sports Radio, Kings basketball, Raiders football, A's Baseball, Sharks Hockey, NFL and College Football, College Basketball and other available sporting events coverage.
History
KHTK first signed on the air on November 12, 1926. It carried the call letters KGDM. The station was originally licensed to Hercules Broadcasting, licensed to Stockton, California, and operating at 1130 kHz with 1,000 watts of power. Initially it was a daytime-only station. Later at 1140 kHz with 5,000 W of power, it was authorized to broadcast full-time. By 1962, the station had changed its city of license to Sacramento, and moved to new facilities with 50,000 W of power. It flipped to a country music format, and adopted the call lettersKRAK. Some of the early personalities included "Oakie Paul" Westmoreland, Walt Shaw, and Dick Baines. With country music moving more into the mainstream during the 1970s, KRAK became one of the Sacramento area's most popular stations. Listeners were not only exposed to artists such as Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson, Waylon Jennings, and Willie Nelson, but enjoyed two decades of on-air personality stability. Joey Mitchell worked the 6:00 - 10:00AM "Drive Time" and was named "Sacramento Radio Personality of the Year" several times. Rick Stewart could be heard middays between 10:00 - 2:00PM. Big Jim Hall covered the 2:00 - 6:00PM "Afternoon Drive." Hal Murray worked evenings. Fred Hoffman hosted "Captain Fred's All-Night Truckin' Show. All had Top 40 backgrounds which led to a tighter, more upbeat format. KRAK continued to broadcast into the 1990s, long after other music stations had switched to the FM band. KRAK-FM would eventually move ahead in the ratings, later becoming 105.1 KNCI through changes after a purchase by CBS Radio and frequency switching. Meanwhile, on February 28, 1994, KRAK became KHTK, first a talk station, later flipping to its current all-sports format. The call letters "KRAK" would make a brief return in the Sacramento media market as a country oldies station at AM 1470 before that station was sold to Radio Disney and is today KIID airing programming in Punjabi. Most recently, the KRAK call letters were assigned to the now-KMPS in Victor Valley, California, also owned by CBS and airing the CBS Sports Radio Network. On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with Entercom. On October 10, CBS Radio announced that as part of the process of obtaining regulatory approval of the merger, KHTK would be one of sixteen stations that would be divested by Entercom, along with sister stations KYMX, KZZO, and KNCI. On November 1, Entercom announced that Bonneville would begin operating KHTK, KYMX, KZZO and KNCI via a local marketing agreement when the merger of CBS and Entercom closed on November 17, while their licenses were placed into a divestiture trust pending a sale to a different owner within 180 days. On August 3, 2018, Bonneville announced it would buy the stations outright in a $141 million deal; the sale was completed on September 21, 2018.