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On 4/23/2016 5:05 PM, amdx wrote:
On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:55 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 4/23/16 1:15 PM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 12:45:52 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: On 4/23/16 12:31 PM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 10:52:44 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: Four calls so far this week from Sirius XM asking why I haven't initialized my three month trial. "Because I'm not interested, that's why." This is a big time FM radio market, with lots of commercial free stations, including some that play the music I prefer, and if I hit the road for a trip out of this market, I, like everyone else, have a portable device that holds many gigs of the music I like. I haven't listened to the radio in about 16-17 years. I do get XM/S bundled in with my satellite TV package and we turn it on occasionally. BTW what stations in DC are commercial free? NPR? WAMU, WETA, and a station out of Bal'mer are the ones I listen to... WETA must have upped their power if you are getting it in Calvert County. When I was there they were one of the stations you only got well at night. WETA took over WGMS and another station and uses three broadcast towers now, and, of course, it is "internet-able." I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek Larry Glick was really funny. He used to make a lot of those calls to payphones all over the country. Dick Summer also had a great show with "Irving" the Venus Flytrap. |
#12
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On 4/23/16 5:05 PM, amdx wrote:
On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:55 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 4/23/16 1:15 PM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 12:45:52 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: On 4/23/16 12:31 PM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 10:52:44 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: Four calls so far this week from Sirius XM asking why I haven't initialized my three month trial. "Because I'm not interested, that's why." This is a big time FM radio market, with lots of commercial free stations, including some that play the music I prefer, and if I hit the road for a trip out of this market, I, like everyone else, have a portable device that holds many gigs of the music I like. I haven't listened to the radio in about 16-17 years. I do get XM/S bundled in with my satellite TV package and we turn it on occasionally. BTW what stations in DC are commercial free? NPR? WAMU, WETA, and a station out of Bal'mer are the ones I listen to... WETA must have upped their power if you are getting it in Calvert County. When I was there they were one of the stations you only got well at night. WETA took over WGMS and another station and uses three broadcast towers now, and, of course, it is "internet-able." I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek I listened to Jean Shepherd at night, coming over on a NYC station. WOR? |
#13
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On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote:
On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. |
#14
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#16
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On Sun, 24 Apr 2016 02:58:30 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 4/24/2016 1:12 AM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. WBZ is one of the "clear channel" stations meaning there are very few other AM stations that broadcast near WBZ's frequency assignment. Last I knew it was a 50,000 watt station and at night it's signal is listenable over a good part of the country, especially the mid-west. I have a friend who occasionally co-hosts a call-in talk show on WBZ that runs from midnight to 5 am. She gets calls from listeners from Minnesota, Colorado and other states across the nation. Yup, when we were doing "AM DXing" there were 3 or 4 far away stations we could get at night if the atmospherics were right. I have picked up WLS on I-95 in the Carolinas while I was on my way to Florida. It is weird because it will pop up as clear as a bell and a while later it just fades away. The old Childrens Band worked that way too. Occasionally you would hear someone from 1000 miles away but they just came and went. Whether you could actually respond was another thing. (although it was technically illegal to do so) |
#17
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Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/24/2016 1:12 AM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. WBZ is one of the "clear channel" stations meaning there are very few other AM stations that broadcast near WBZ's frequency assignment. Last I knew it was a 50,000 watt station and at night it's signal is listenable over a good part of the country, especially the mid-west. I have a friend who occasionally co-hosts a call-in talk show on WBZ that runs from midnight to 5 am. She gets calls from listeners from Minnesota, Colorado and other states across the nation. 1964 when at NCR school in Dayton, OH we listened to Wolfman Jack out of Del Rio, TX. I think the transmitter was across the border in Mexico and pumped out more than 50,000 watts. Was a great show. We still have a lot of AM stations in California. Locally KGO the liberal Moderate station is going the way of national syndicated shows. The same company also owns KSFO which is the conservative talk radio station, and has been mostly national shows for a long time. We do not get it locally as is not an Internet station, but the Central Valley has an FM station that plays all 40-50-60-70 music with little advertising. |
#18
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wrote:
On Sun, 24 Apr 2016 02:58:30 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 4/24/2016 1:12 AM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. WBZ is one of the "clear channel" stations meaning there are very few other AM stations that broadcast near WBZ's frequency assignment. Last I knew it was a 50,000 watt station and at night it's signal is listenable over a good part of the country, especially the mid-west. I have a friend who occasionally co-hosts a call-in talk show on WBZ that runs from midnight to 5 am. She gets calls from listeners from Minnesota, Colorado and other states across the nation. Yup, when we were doing "AM DXing" there were 3 or 4 far away stations we could get at night if the atmospherics were right. I have picked up WLS on I-95 in the Carolinas while I was on my way to Florida. It is weird because it will pop up as clear as a bell and a while later it just fades away. The old Childrens Band worked that way too. Occasionally you would hear someone from 1000 miles away but they just came and went. Whether you could actually respond was another thing. (although it was technically illegal to do so) Furthest away I got a station is when I was returning home from Keesler AFB the radio buttons were still set from Biloxi. And going over Donner Pass, New Orleans came in clear as a bell. |
#19
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On 4/24/2016 10:42 AM, Califbill wrote:
wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2016 02:58:30 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 4/24/2016 1:12 AM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. WBZ is one of the "clear channel" stations meaning there are very few other AM stations that broadcast near WBZ's frequency assignment. Last I knew it was a 50,000 watt station and at night it's signal is listenable over a good part of the country, especially the mid-west. I have a friend who occasionally co-hosts a call-in talk show on WBZ that runs from midnight to 5 am. She gets calls from listeners from Minnesota, Colorado and other states across the nation. Yup, when we were doing "AM DXing" there were 3 or 4 far away stations we could get at night if the atmospherics were right. I have picked up WLS on I-95 in the Carolinas while I was on my way to Florida. It is weird because it will pop up as clear as a bell and a while later it just fades away. The old Childrens Band worked that way too. Occasionally you would hear someone from 1000 miles away but they just came and went. Whether you could actually respond was another thing. (although it was technically illegal to do so) Furthest away I got a station is when I was returning home from Keesler AFB the radio buttons were still set from Biloxi. And going over Donner Pass, New Orleans came in clear as a bell. Shortly after the band was expanded to 1700kHz, there were several stations above 1600kHz. I received a 1620 station from California in Florida. It was a call in program, I should have called them, but it was 2am in the morning and I didn't want to wake the wife. Mikek |
#20
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On Sunday, 24 April 2016 12:42:13 UTC-3, Califbill wrote:
wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2016 02:58:30 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 4/24/2016 1:12 AM, wrote: On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 16:05:49 -0500, amdx wrote: On 4/23/2016 1:37 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I was reading the other day that most of the AM stations are being shut down or sold to special interest broadcasters. Affected is the first commercial radio station in the USA ... WBZ in Boston. I used to listen to 'BZ all the time as a kid ... Red Sox games and then Dick Summer and Larry Glick at night. Too bad to see them being shut down but they are another casualty of the Internet and technology. I listened to WBZ in the 80's and part of the 90s. I lived in Michigan at the time and WBZ came in very well in the evening. I enjoyed Larry Glick in the middle of the night, starting at 1 or 2 am. Glick had some hilarious skits. Anyone recall him calling the Hawaiian pay phone? I also listened to David Brudnoy earlier in the evening, around 10 or 11pm, Brudnoy was very intelligent and did more serious interviews. After I moved to Florida and got up an antenna, I only received WBZ very clear for about 30 seconds one evening and then never again. I sent a letter to them asking if the were going to put their programing on the internet, I got a response, "not at this time", some CBS rules as I understood it. Years later, I received an email saying their programing was now on the internet. They must have saved all the emails asking about internet programming. Sorry to hear they are shutting down. Good Memories. Mikek When I was in DC we went the other way and listened to Dick Biondi on WLS in Chicago. A good super het radio connected to a 100' antenna locked it in like it was local at night. We used to have one good AM talk station here that was all local during the day and went to syndicated shows like Dr Dean and that travel/money guy. The local show was good because it was mostly local stuff and they got the real guys on. I called in one day, talked to the Lee County DOT director and got the light at the end of my street retimed within a week. That was also where we heard the real story about James Billie (indian chief and casino manager) and the panther he killed. We also heard the real story about Reahart and his fight with Lee County that made it all the way to the steps of the SCOTUS who let his ruling stand (the government has to pay if they rezone your property) Both of them just quietly went away in the news. Rush Limbaugh killed local talk. He started giving his show away and it was cheaper than paying local people for a bigger audience. I looked and we have 16 AM stations that you might be able to hear. Half are spanish, 1 adult contemporary, 1 country, 2 news and the rest are sports talk. WBZ is one of the "clear channel" stations meaning there are very few other AM stations that broadcast near WBZ's frequency assignment. Last I knew it was a 50,000 watt station and at night it's signal is listenable over a good part of the country, especially the mid-west. I have a friend who occasionally co-hosts a call-in talk show on WBZ that runs from midnight to 5 am. She gets calls from listeners from Minnesota, Colorado and other states across the nation. Yup, when we were doing "AM DXing" there were 3 or 4 far away stations we could get at night if the atmospherics were right. I have picked up WLS on I-95 in the Carolinas while I was on my way to Florida. It is weird because it will pop up as clear as a bell and a while later it just fades away. The old Childrens Band worked that way too. Occasionally you would hear someone from 1000 miles away but they just came and went. Whether you could actually respond was another thing. (although it was technically illegal to do so) Furthest away I got a station is when I was returning home from Keesler AFB the radio buttons were still set from Biloxi. And going over Donner Pass, New Orleans came in clear as a bell. We could get the big powerful stations from New York up here at night. |
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