![]() Where else on earth could you turn on terrestrial radio and randomly hear Ice Cube's “You Know How We Do It”? A numb spring night could suddenly come alive. When it received its third resuscitation in 2009 (also programmed as classic rap), it was too good to be true. ![]() The Bluth family will get older, but '90s G-Funk stays the same age. Eventually settling in as one of America's only classic hip-hop signals, KDAY's return was better than the announcement of new episodes of Arrested Development. So when its call letters were revived here in 2004, it was the next best thing to Tupac's resurrection. See also: KDAY, the Gangsta Rap Oldies Station, Breaks New Ground by Playing Music From the Bad Old Days Makaveli never even lived in Southern California during the first AM incarnation of KDAY, but the memory of America's first all-rap radio station was already a rallying cry by 1996. Tupac asked that question on “To Live & Die in LA,” but the answer was obvious.
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