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I'd like to put a plug in for my new favorite "radio" station.

A bit of a background on me, first. I was in radio for 40 years. I started in the music and programming side of things and, around 1994, switched to the news and journalism side of things - with my heart still in music.

I consider myself a "pop tart," a phrase coined by a former music director of mine (who now is a morning news anchor on WINS in NYC.) I love pop music. The more bubble gum the better. Boy bands, the Monkees, disco, etc. My dream was to work on a CHR/Top 40 radio station but my delivery didn't work for that. So I worked Adult Contemporary, Oldies and Country (briefly). The rock I like was WPLJ in NY when they were in their rock phase in the 70s. Very pop.

So I'm shocked that this station is my go to all the time now. It's channel 14, Life with John Mayer on SiriusXM. It's got to be the best programmed station I've ever heard. Period. It features music from the 60s to today. It is heavily dayparted. Very upbeat on a Saturday night. And this morning, Sunday, I'm super relaxed with tunes I've never heard before, mixed in with some CSN and Joe Cocker's You Are So Beautiful. Mayer does all the voice tracks. And he actually is engaging! Not just some generic DJ reading liner cards and telling folks to download the company app. A perfect example is his explanation of Bonnie Raitt's Nick of Time. I had no idea about the background on that song. Sometimes he talks about the form of the song. It's all pretty fascinating.

Terrestrial radio needs to take a page from this book. I don't know about radio near you, but over the air radio near me BLOWS big time. Music is programmed from some corporate office somewhere. The DJs, if there are any, are usually living in some other town. I can usually find a stream somewhere, without commercials, that's does a better job with music I want to hear.

Life with John Mayer educates me a bit, engages me a bit, plays some music I know and like, introduces me to new stuff and sets a great mood for the time of day.

John and SXM make a fantastic pair!
 
Just a quick sample of the recent House Oversight Committee's hearing on UAPs, here with Elizondo.
*If you followed the entire hearing, it is earth shattering!
I caught the movie "Interstellar" last night again; maybe it's us 😄



 
The defensiveness is what really speaks up to me that someone is meaning to hide something.

Those air force drone videos that leaked out 20 years ago. They denied them. Then they put out a bunch of aperture effect videos for strawmen to point to to debunk that. Now we see those very same original videos officially released 20 years later.

Now we have these hearings and the most disgraced and discredited congress critters are put in charge? Can you say poisoning the well?

It's hard to find provenance with some of the shaky videos sharing around but someone is sure acting like they have something to hide.
 
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The defensiveness is what really speaks up to me that someone is meaning to hide something.

Those air force drone videos that leaked out 20 years ago. They denied them. Then they put out a bunch of aperture effect videos for strawmen to point to to debunk that. Now we see those very same original videos officially released 20 years later.

Now we have these hearings and the most disgraced and discredited congress critters are put in charge? Can you say poisoning the well?

It's hard to find providence with some of the shaky videos sharing around but someone is sure acting like they have something to hide.
Provenance, either!!
Just messing wit ya, young man.
 
I'd like to put a plug in for my new favorite "radio" station.

A bit of a background on me, first. I was in radio for 40 years. I started in the music and programming side of things and, around 1994, switched to the news and journalism side of things - with my heart still in music.

I consider myself a "pop tart," a phrase coined by a former music director of mine (who now is a morning news anchor on WINS in NYC.) I love pop music. The more bubble gum the better. Boy bands, the Monkees, disco, etc. My dream was to work on a CHR/Top 40 radio station but my delivery didn't work for that. So I worked Adult Contemporary, Oldies and Country (briefly). The rock I like was WPLJ in NY when they were in their rock phase in the 70s. Very pop.

So I'm shocked that this station is my go to all the time now. It's channel 14, Life with John Mayer on SiriusXM. It's got to be the best programmed station I've ever heard. Period. It features music from the 60s to today. It is heavily dayparted. Very upbeat on a Saturday night. And this morning, Sunday, I'm super relaxed with tunes I've never heard before, mixed in with some CSN and Joe Cocker's You Are So Beautiful. Mayer does all the voice tracks. And he actually is engaging! Not just some generic DJ reading liner cards and telling folks to download the company app. A perfect example is his explanation of Bonnie Raitt's Nick of Time. I had no idea about the background on that song. Sometimes he talks about the form of the song. It's all pretty fascinating.

Terrestrial radio needs to take a page from this book. I don't know about radio near you, but over the air radio near me BLOWS big time. Music is programmed from some corporate office somewhere. The DJs, if there are any, are usually living in some other town. I can usually find a stream somewhere, without commercials, that's does a better job with music I want to hear.

Life with John Mayer educates me a bit, engages me a bit, plays some music I know and like, introduces me to new stuff and sets a great mood for the time of day.

John and SXM make a fantastic pair!
I do not subscribe to satellite radio, or any really, though I have a Spotify free account since the early days.
Besides the usual litany of religious, country, "classic (sic) rock", and a 70's/80's station, not much else to hear these days in my parts.
I only turn on the radio in my shop in the odd event I hear an old Cars song or such. (well, some country)

Down in Central Florida, where I grew up, we had some absolutely ass kicking FM stations as the 70's progressed. Deep album cuts, sometimes play an LP, flip it over.
The first FM station broadcasting any sort of rock I recall, was from WUSF at the University of South Florida in Tampa, and at first, only two hours on Friday night; otherwise strictly classical music.
I was listening to this station when Duane Allman died/was reported on that station in '71. Only place I heard it at the time.

I assume (broadcast) radio used to be an integral part of all our lives.
Now I just don't care so much.
 
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Not out of any bias, but more language and rhythm. Hard for me to get into Indian music.
But yes, t he vocals come clear out at you.
Too clear, in my opinion. At least on my setup those vocals are uncomfortably loud, and detract from the experience.

When it comes to foreign music, I generally am open to it. Of course what I think is good probably feeds more into western tastes than anything that is popular in the respective country.

I find out about Indian music if I happen to watch an Indian film, because a staggering amount of them are musicals.

Actually in hindsight, the stereo mix on YouTube isn't that bad...however in the film you just get blasted with the vocals. 😓
 
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