Diamondback
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,916
Usually news/talk, otherwise it's my MP3 library so I'm not subject to anyone's programming whims except my own.
LizzieMaine said:I think radio as I knew it when I worked in it -- local, community-driven, substantial -- is dead, and has been dead since the late '90s, at least in the United States. And it isn't coming back.
But I still listen to certain things -- baseball games, for example. I absolutely loathe modern baseball television coverage, the yawping-idiot/ESPN/rock-n-roll approach, and even though some of that has infected radio coverage as well, it's still possible to turn on a ball game on a summer afternoon and enjoy it.
Basically, I'd listen to radio more if there was more on radio worth listening to. Nowadays, aside from the occasional ballgame and the occasional thing on NPR, there's just nothing left on the modern airwaves that interests me. With my own little AM transmitter, I can program my own radio.
Widebrim said:Local radio is not entirely dead, just depends what part of the U.S. you are in. Here in Los Angeles, there are a couple of community FM stations, aimed primarily towards the Black and Hispanic audience, and a couple of local AM Spanish-language stations which still have a finger on the pulse of the barrio. But pretty much gone are the days when you could hear on KIEV-AM 870, "And when you need an auto shop you can depend on, take your car to Bistagne Bros. in Glendale," or "Make your next stop Pizza Pete's on Glendale Ave., where you can get a slice of pepperoni pizza for only 35 cents." It's a shame, because when I'm in my '51 Packard, I can't tune into any music except Mexican and Korean (not really what you'd want to be eminating from a vintage vehicle...). I could put on the Disney station, but Jonas Bros. and Miley Cyrus don't cut it, either.:eusa_doh: So I end up listening to national talk radio, both conservative and liberal, until I get tired of it ten minutes later. I need to get a FM/Digital player for the Patrician, but then I need to figure a way to mount it properly under the dash...[/QUOTE]
Seconded heartily here.
I have a sound system with a cassette-type adapter that allows me to play my mp3 through the speakers. I hardly ever listen to radio; Cocktail Nation, Bamboo Radio, various radio podcasts, etc. It's like I am programming for my own radio station.
Professor said:I don't have it myself, but satellite radio has a fantastic station called "Forties at Four"
Professor said:I don't have it myself, but satellite radio has a fantastic station called "Forties at Four"!
John in Covina said:Unfortunately, LA has no swing crooner vintage pop stations, that I am aware of, although they used to have a fun station that played Sinatra swing and Michael Buble but it was too good to last.
Missy Hellfire said:Does anyone listen to the radio any more, or is it being superceded by mp3s and suchlike? I enjoy the radio, BBC Radio 4 in particular and tend to shy away from popular music stations. Also, with the advent of digital radio in Britain, there are stations such as BBC Radio 7 that re run many of the shows from way back such as The Goons and Around the Horn which are brilliant. Also, don't ask me why but if life is getting to me I only have to listen to the shipping forecast to know that all is right with the world!
I was just wondering if sitting down to listen to the wireless had become a thing of the past? Has video really killed the radio star? And if not, what do people enjoy listening to?