Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts

Thursday, January 11, 2018

"listen to more audio" Smart Speakers Info From CES 2018




Good news for audio not for TV. Interesting data from AllAccess.com report "Wednesday At CES 2018: Deep-Diving Into The Smart Speaker World"

71% said they listen to more audio since getting a smart speaker (and 28% of those said they are listening to more News-Talk content), but 30% said the device is replacing time spent with TV. (WOW!)

Additionally, 61% said they are interested in getting the technology in their cars -- good news for the car makers who have announced ALEXA and GOOGLE ASSISTANT capabilities in their vehicles.

And the research, WEBSTER noted, showed people "gathering around" the devices the way families used to gather around the radio before television; (WOW!)

66% said they use the devices to entertain family and friends (the devices, WEBSTER said, are "removing the earbuds" that have been the primary way people listen to audio in recent generations). (WOW!)

Radio needs to think of these as a transmitter and a broadcast license for the modern world. I think this is a big deal.

I have an Amazon Echo and

yes - I listen to more audio
yes - the device is replacing time spent with TV
yes - I am interested in getting the technology in my car
yes - I use the devices to entertain family and friends
yes - the devices are removing the earbuds

Monday, December 18, 2017

Big Rick On Fiverr For Voice Work

#sidehustle


I am on Fiverr and ready to do some voice work.
It is about $35 for 150 words.

demos and info at the link

I am a 35+ year San Francisco market radio vet. I am not a radio guy with a big scary voice. I have always been a friendly happy sounding "invisible friend" to my listeners no matter the music I was playing.

I have a good voice for your upbeat regular guy read without sounding phony.

I will read copy exactly as written so be sure of what it says.

My audio samples are at soundcloud.com/big-rick-stuart
and bigrick.com

Currently I do 10 am to 3pm Monday to Saturday at 99.3 The Vine KVYN in Napa. I also help produce and host our Vine Time Podcast.

Before The Vine I was at Classic Rock KFOX 98.5 San Jose.
I spent 10 years doing afternoons at AAA KFOG San Francisco from 2000 to 2010.
From 1986 to 2000 I did afternoons at Alternative Live 105 KITS San Francisco.
I also worked at Alternative KQAK The Quake in San Francisco and KNAC in Long Beach.

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

The Sharks Should Buy KFOX here's why


I think the San Jose Sharks should buy KFOX. Here's why.

KFOX (officially FCC licensed as KUFX) is most likely not going to be part of the new Entercom radio group that is merging with CBS Radio. In the San Francisco San Jose Market (considered together for ownership rules) Entercom will be over the limit of stations you can own. KFOX listeners are all over the Bay Area but most of their ratings (and therefore their ad sales) are based in the San Jose area. See a coverage map here

For that reason I think Entercom will not include them in their new ownership group of San Francisco based stations.

Since radio station sale price is mostly based on revenue all other things being equal (signal strength etc) a San Jose station would sell for less than a San Francisco station.



The San Jose Sharks aren't really just the San Jose Sharks. They are really Sharks Sports and Entertainment. In addition to the San Jose Sharks, Sharks Sports and Entertainment currently manages the business operations of several entities. As arena managers, Sharks Sports & Entertainment operates and manages the SAP Center at San Jose, including the booking of all events in the building.

Sharks Sports and Entertainment also manages several ice facilities in the Bay Area, including Sharks Ice at San Jose, Sharks Ice at Fremont and Oakland Ice Center operated by Sharks Ice.

So how would owning a radio station help?

The Sharks have had a long relationship with KFOX. KFOX is and has been a successful San Jose Classic Rock station that also runs live Sharks games during the season. The Sharks don't get much attention from the other sports stations in the market. Football, basketball, and baseball dominate there. Only in the playoffs do you hear much about the Sharks on those stations. They and their fans and advertisers want more than what they get from local sports coverage.

Owning this one station would give them a bigger voice on the airwaves with possible longer pre and post game shows, game replays, coach and or player segments during regular programming. It also opens up another way to distribute podcasts and online audio and video. The Sharks broadcast team already produce a lot of content during the season.

The infrastructure at Sharks Sports and Entertainment means you have a promotions department, ad sales team, production department, IT, HR, and more, plus the offices needed for them. No additional cost there.

How about radio studios? Sharks Sports and Entertainment has audio and video studios where they do their own in house production. A radio station would fit in easily. A radio studio just needs pretty simple equipment these days and takes up very little space. An on call radio engineer can be used for the transmitter issues.

Ad sales for the Sharks broadcasts now become ad sales on KFOX as well. It benefits everybody. Promotions, social, production, and more can all be shared resources. Pre game broadcasts live from SAP Arena could happen for every home game.

When Sharks Sports and Entertainment does concerts or events at SAP Center the ads on KFOX are "free" and the cross promotion ideas are endless.

The cost of buying the station would be something the team could afford and the cost to run the station wouldn't be much. It seems like a no brainer!

I don't have any inside information on this happening and I haven't heard any rumors. The idea came to me when listening to a Sharks pre season game. It seems like a good idea.

#GoSharks

more on Sharks Sports and Entertainment from the 2017 - 2018 Sharks Media guide

Sharks Sports & Entertainment, the parent company of the San Jose Sharks, aims to operate a Stanley Cup-caliber hockey team each and every season, leverage the organization’s core competencies of arena and hockey management to provide world-class sports and entertainment to San Jose, and grow the game of hockey throughout the Bay Area.

In addition to the San Jose Sharks, Sharks Sports & Entertainment currently manages the business operations of several entities.

As arena managers, Sharks Sports & Entertainment operates and manages SAP Center at San Jose, including the booking of all events in the building.  Since its grand opening in September of 1993, SAP Center at San Jose has hosted a “who’s who” of music history, including Paul McCartney, Adele, The Rolling Stones, Barbra Streisand, Katy Perry, Garth Brooks, Beyonce, Elton John, Jay-Z, The Three Tenors (Placido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti and Jose Carreras), Madonna, Lady Gaga, Prince, The Eagles and U2.

SAP Center at San Jose has also hosted world-class, championship sporting events, including: the 2016 Stanley Cup Final; the 2016 Women’s Gymnastics Olympic Trials; three NCAA Men’s Basketball Western Regional Finals; 2003- 07 Pac-10 Women’s Basketball Tournament; 1999 NCAA Women’s Basketball Final Four; 1996 and 2012 U.S. Figure Skating Championships; and 2012 Olympic Trials – Men and Women’s Gymnastics.

In 2018, the highly sought-after U.S. Figure Skating Championships will return to SAP Center.

Sharks Sports & Entertainment also owns and operates the American Hockey League’s (AHL) San Jose Barracuda, the San Jose Sharks top development hockey affiliate, which relocated to San Jose in 2015. Formerly the Worcester Sharks, the Sharks top minor league affiliate, under the coaching tutelage of Roy Sommer, the AHL’s all-time winningest coach, has paved the “road to San Jose” for a number of current San Jose Sharks, including Logan Couture, Joe Pavelski, Justin Braun, Chris Tierney and Melker Karlsson. In total, 15 of the 20 players from the Sharks 2016 Stanley Cup Final roster spent time playing in the American Hockey League during their career. In 2016-17, the Barracuda, as one of the youngest teams in the AHL, finished the regular season with the second best record en route to the franchise’s first Western Conference Finals appearance. In addition, several players were recognized with league honors and Sommer was tabbed as the AHL’s Coach of the Year.

Sharks Sports & Entertainment also manages several ice facilities in the Bay Area, including Solar4America Ice at San Jose, Solar4America Ice at Fremont and Oakland Ice Center operated by Sharks Ice.  Solar4America Ice at San Jose, one of only ten facilities in the United States with four or more NHL-sized ice rinks, is the largest facility of its type located west of the Mississippi River. 

Solar4America Ice at San Jose is the official training facility of the San Jose Sharks, San Jose Barracuda and also is the home of the San Jose Jr. Sharks travel hockey program, recognized by USA Hockey as one of 21 model association programs in the country.

As the host to a number of national figure skating and hockey tournaments, Solar4America Ice at San Jose is a travel destination and responsible for the second-highest number of hotel room reservations in San Jose on an annual basis, behind only the San Jose Convention Center.

Furthermore, according to USA Hockey, the Sharks Ice family of ice rinks is home to the highest number of registered adult hockey players, with more than 4,500 active participants.

Thursday, September 14, 2017

CBS Radio plus Entercom in SF/SJ is over by 4 FMs

The Entercom and CBS radio merger should be complete by the end of the year. In the San Francisco/San Jose market that will put the ownership over the limit by 4 FMs. Some stations will have to be sold or put in a trust while they are waiting to be sold and will not be part of the new Entercom.

The FCC rules state in a radio market with 45 or more stations, an entity may own up to eight radio stations, no more than five of which may be in the same service (AM or FM)

Here is a graphic of the recent ratings from All Access with both ownership groups highlighted. Ratings aren't everything especially these 6+ ratings that don't show how well stations do in their demo. This is all the public is allowed to see.

Cume (The total number of different persons who tune to a radio station during the course of a daypart for at least five minutes) and of course revenue and costs have a big say on what stations make the cut. See the 6+ cume at the All Access link

Don't forget the format and the station are different. The new Entercom might want to keep a good FM signal in the mix and change or tweak the format that is on the air.

It will all probably be announced soon.

Good luck to all my radio friends!

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Saturday, September 9, 2017

Napa Vine Time Podcast Harvest 2017




I really like the Napa Vine Time podcast from the staff of 99.3 The Vine. Here is the latest episode.

Find them all at 993TheVine.com

Good Morning Bob gets the details from Napa’s 16 year old Travis Risley as he finished A Ride to Support Fallen Police Officers a bicycle ride the length of California to raise funds for the California Peace Officers’ Memorial Foundation, which supports the families of fallen officers.

Big Rick gives you the first Napa harvest update of the 2017 season

Drive time Mindi lets you in on Things Mindi Loves

Sharpie talks to Fly With Wine about the best way to take your wine on an airline

Of course there is music as well. The host of Monday night’s Napa Homegrown Music show Victoria Field Sykes plays a favorite from Mars Lazar.

Thanks to our Napa Vine Time Podcast sponsors Hope And Grace wines.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

From 2000 My Paper Welcome To KFOG


Lots of radio stations used to publish a newsletter to publicize what they did. When I started at KFOG in 2000 they did a profile of me in the October Fog Tracks.

Reading this now I am surprised how truthful I was and how they included bands I liked that didn't really fit the KFOG format. Most stations would edit that out or change it. That wasn't the KFOG way. They were really honest with listeners and if you were in to a hobby or activity you could talk about it. There is no mention of the station I was at just before KFOG :)

At KFOG there were some unique personalities and I thought (but was never told) that I would be the "regular guy" that fishes for salmon, and likes the Raiders and 49ers, and all of that stuff. I did and I talked about it.

For the first month or so I was pretty nervous. I had to change from slightly wild Alternative guy to a much more mature adult KFOG guy. I was really comfortable in my previous job but it was like narrowcasting compared to the huge audience of KFOG. I felt like a rookie at Lakers training camp with Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal. Back then the Lakers were good the Warriors were not!

I worked it out and found my groove and loved working there for the next 10 years!

I still like all the bands I mentioned and The Powerpuff Girls but no more powerlifting these days.

Things always change in radio. Like everyone else I got my job because a DJ wasn't there anymore.

In that spirit I have and always will wish the best to every DJ at every station if it is a place I worked at or a competitor. No matter what we get to do a fun job for a little while then somebody else gets to sit in what I call "The Big Chair."


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Wednesday, March 1, 2017

The Howard Stern and I.R.S. Lawsuit

Howard Stern and the I.R.S. are having issues. It's not what you might think.



On May 19th 2015 an I.R.S. agent called the Howard Stern show and was put on hold to wait his turn to be on the air. While he was on hold a woman called and was put to his phone on another line. I'm guessing that was his work phone and his personal phone was the one on hold with Howard Stern.

As he was discussing her income tax issues for 45 minutes the show heard the call and put it on the air. She has sued Howard Stern and the I.R.S. for damages.

It sounds like a radio stunt but it isn't.

This is a good read on the case from Steven J.J. Weisman a practicing attorney, legal editor for TALKERS magazine, a professor of Media Law at Bentley University in Waltham, Massachusetts. He describes the claims and concludes

Ultimately, it would appear that this is a case that will never reach a courtroom.  The liability of agent Forsythe, the IRS and the federal government are quite clear and further litigation of this matter would prolong the embarrassment of the IRS.  It can be expected that the IRS will settle this case with a payment to Barrigas.

As for Howard Stern, his liability is not as clear and the extent of the harm suffered by Ms. Barrigas would need to be firmly established in court even if she were to establish Stern’s legal liability during a trial.  However, if Barrigas has found the notoriety brought to her by the incident to be troubling, the prospects of a trial including extensive cross-examination of her that would become fodder for the media would seem to be something she would not wish for.  Therefore, it is likely that it would be in the best interests of both Barrigas and Stern to settle this matter.  It would be expected that a confidentiality agreement as to the terms of any settlement would apply.

I wonder what will happen to agent Forsythe?

Read more of his legal columns at the Talkers website

Monday, February 20, 2017

Queen Meets Kraftwerk! Audio for the Napa Cherry Pie Criterium Bicycle Race

Queen meets Kraftwerk! Here is some audio I produced for the Eagle Cycling Club to use at the Cherry Pie Criterium bicycle race today. Yes a race in the rain!


The goal was to be kind of casual and not too "announcer guy" sounding.

I had fun doing it. 

I hope people liked it!



Monday, February 13, 2017

A Great Read on Retirement

A Great great great (yes 3x great worthy) Read in the Wall Street Journal today no matter your age or if you are retired. If you are young read it and remember the advice!

The Biggest Surprises in Retirement

We asked readers to tell us about the things they didn’t anticipate when they stopped working. They had plenty to say.




Read the article at the link above.

One of the best things I ever did was have a lunch with a successfully retired guy. He had a good job in engineering with some big companies (not tech) and was living a good life and doing fun things as a retired guy. I had lunch with him and told him I wanted to know what he did. How he did it. What advice he would have for a 40 something guy like me.

What I learned wasn't that different from what I had read. Stay out of debt. Be frugal. Invest. Live well below your means but don't do nothing. Don't deny yourself everything. Have fun. Health will be a bigger expense than you think. Don't work so late in life that health issues prevent you from enjoying the plans you have made.

His insight to my career path as a radio DJ was correct that income for me was a bell curve and I had had a good run but the backside of the bell was my future.

I really credit him and that lunch with confirming things I was doing and giving me things to think about.

There are books to read like "Stop Acting Rich: ...and Start Living Like A Real Millionaire" that cover some of these ideas.

A book like "A Random Walk Down Wall Street: The Time-Tested Strategy for Successful Investing" can help get you an idea of a simple way to start investing with lots of information for the regular Joe and Josephine.

Friday, February 10, 2017

99.3 The Vine Napa Vine Time Podcast Billy Bob Thorton Episode

Here it is! I think this is a fun podcast episode.





DJ's from 99.3 The Vine Napa get together on a podcast
Good Morning Bob interviews "Bad Santa" Billy Bob Thorton
Big Rick Stuart has wine reviews and a wine movie tip
Sharpie talks to the owner of the Napa hot spot Napkins
Napa Homegrown music from BottleRock band Secure The Sun

It is all brought to you by our sponsors Hope and Grace Wines in Yountville.

Enjoy!

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Love It: the Motel 6 Super Game Ad :)

Love this Super Bowl um I mean Big Game ad from Motel 6.

Because the rights to "Super Bowl" is sold to sponsors and protected by the NFL media or businesses can't have a Super Bowl party or mention much else about it in a non news way unless they are an official Super Bowl sponsor.

While I have never heard of somebody going to court over it in broadcast media you always get emails from the legal team not to mention a Super Bowl party for the station, or you can't run a client's ad for a Super Bowl sale.

Listen as Tom Bodett gingerly steps around these issues in this Motel 6 ad.

Is he great or what?


Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Disco Don "I just do it for the love" Britain's OLDEST DJ still spinning records at the age of 80


"For the love" a good reason to do it!

He has always regularly attracted a devoted following of around 70 fans known as 'Donettes' who turn up each week to boogie with him.




more at the Express

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Football Podcast week 7 preview

Another weekly NFL podcast is up with a preview of the upcoming week 7 games. I do this with my buddy Troy Clardy of ESPN.

Have a listen at the KFOG Podcast page from ther you can listen directly, download from iTunes, and subscribe to all of our Podcasts as well.

You can always join in the weekly KFOG Football Pool. You just have to pick winners, and the weekly winner gets a CD 6 pack!

Sirius crushes XM after merger

Some time back I wrote about what I thought might happen at Sirius/XM. I'm just another moron with a blog, but I have worked in radio a long time. I am also a Sirius subscriber since they started.

I was right on some things, wrong on others and don't know yet on a few.

I was pretty sure about a couple of things. Having worked for and watched Mel Karmazin in old skool radio I knew his company loyalty. Since he would be the new man in charge after the merger I thought he would keep the Sirius guys and boot the XM guys. He's pretty loyal like that.

I also thought (knew) he would cut costs and expenses in a big brutal way like a southern California fire.

He's doing both.

Probably the XM subscribers are pissed. Maybe some Sirius subscribers are too. They were looking forward to multiple choices of our weird little formats. But it seems not to be.

Mel is slashing staff, keeping Sirius people behind the scenes and on the air, and will keep the BIG names from both. Oprah, Stern, Martha, all the sports stay. Rumors are that it will be one set of stations broadcast on both XM and Sirius. Hey thats 1/2 the cost with all the superstars.

from Radio and Records

"Among the names we're hearing are caught up in this first round of cuts: Eight-and-a-half-year vet Kurt Gilchrist, senior PD of XM's Decades channels; George Taylor Morris, a jock on XM Deep Tracks and senior director of original programming; Kandy Klutch, afternoon talent on XM '80s on 8; John Clay, PD of XM's '70s on 7; PD Billy Zero and "Dean of Music" Tobi from XMU; alternative channel Ethel MD Erik Range; Rick Lambert, PD of new wave channel Fred and an eight-year company vet; Kevin Kash, PD/midday talent/host of the "Breaking Bone! Hour" on the Boneyard; and Bill Hutton, PD of classic alternative channel Lucy. R&R also hears that while some of these employees are leaving immediately, some are staying for another couple of weeks, when a second wave of terminations may wash over the satellite nation."

"The hemorrhaging continues at Sirius XM as more names of the departing keep rolling in: In addition to everyone we named yesterday, other exits include Marlin Taylor, PD of gospel channel Enlighten and '40s on 4; '50s on 5 PD Ken Smith and MD Matt the Cat; '60s on 6 PD Pat Clarke; Jessie Scott, PD of X-Country; country channel America PD Ray Knight, MD John Welch and show coordinator "Country Dan" Dixon; Lisa Lisa, PD of urban channel the City; and PD Bill Evans, MD Brian Chamberlain and jock Cathy Carter from triple A channel XM Café."

"Another date being tossed around is Nov. 5, when it's rumored that a new combined Sirius XM lineup will be rolled out -- rather than doing an a la carte/pick from both sides dealie like had been previously announced, it's looking like both will consolidate into a single channel lineup that will be beamed out over both Sirius' and XM's networks. R&R hears that both lineups are currently under scrutiny and, where there's duplication, one side's offering will be nixed -- and it's looking like Sirius is winning."

Wow there's some really talented names in that mix. Best of luck to them all.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Chicago DJ emails "it's so cold that..."

A buddy of mine in Chicago emailed this:

Wind chill is 20 below right now. And oh yes, it's windy.

Funny story.... Yesterday I take a shower, towel dry my hair, and then walk one HALF of a block to my car, and then feel the back of my head. My mother****king hair was frozen.

Jason Thomas
DJ, WXRT

Wednesday, April 23, 2003

Big Rick Stuart looms large over Bay Area radio

here's an article from the Oakland Tribune written just after I came to KFOG


Big' Rick Stuart looms large over Bay Area radio
Disc jockey maintains focus on the music


Jim Harrington

There are on-air personalities, and there are disc jockeys. The East Bay's Big Rick Stuart is a disc jockey.

That's not to say that there is anything wrong with Stuart's personality. He's a warm, friendly and funny man with a large enough personality to match both his moniker and his football-lineman build.

It's just that he didn't get into the business more than 20 years ago to hear himself talk. The Oakland resident got into radio to play music. In a world full of Howard Stern-wannabes, that desire makes Big Rick a refreshing change of pace on the radio dial.

As Stuart picks through the remains of a cobb salad during a recent lunch at Kincaid's restaurant at Oakland's Jack London Square, only moments before departing for his shift at KFOG radio, the popular DJ explains that he developed his radio style from listening to the legends of the industry.

"Wolfman Jack is one of my all-time heroes," Stuart says. "Wolfman Jack would say _ to paraphrase _ that his job was to make it fun for people to listen to music that they like.

"And that's as simple as it is. He would straight up say that he wasn't the show. It wasn't Wolfman Jack on the radio. It was Wolfman Jack playing music that the listeners liked to hear."

In similar fashion, Stuart firmly believes that playing music is the most important part of his job.

"That's not true of every disc jockey and every disc jockey's job," he reasons. "But it's definitely true for me. And that's what I want to do. That's the only kind of radio that I want to do. If I had to do a morning show and do stunts and have shock-jock stuff . . . I couldn't do it. I would turn the job down."

The 41-year-old San Francisco native's love for music stretches back to his childhood in the '70s. Growing up in Richmond, not-yet-"Big" Rick Stuart listened to an assortment of popular bands of the day.

"I was a really big music guy," he recalls. "I had everything from Parliament and Kiss to the Ramones and the New York Dolls. So, I listened to a lot of different music. And I constantly listened to the radio."

Not wanting to move far from his boyhood home in the East Bay, Stuart enrolled at the University of San Francisco after graduating from high school in 1979. It was at the "Home of the Dons" where Stuart got his first crack at radio.

He took some shift work at KUSF, the university's acclaimed radio channel, and was immediately hooked. However, Stuart wasn't a natural on the radio at first.

"I was totally nervous," he remembered. "I was totally mic shy."

But Stuart is "Big" in the determination department as well. He practiced at night, imitating local DJs, and took as many shifts as possible at KUSF. He progressed to the point where he was offered a weekend job at a small station two and 1/2 hours north of the Bay Area in the Clearlake area in late '79.

"It was incredibly glamorous," Stuart laughs. "You string up the tape and press play and sit back for 59 minutes. That was how it worked. But I got to say 'KBLC Lakeport' once an hour."

But that was the beginning of Big Rick's professional career. He began working his way up the ladder in Bay Area radio and got a big break in 1986 when he was hired to work at Live 105 in San Francisco.

It was the right time to be working for a modern rock station, as what once was truly "alternative music" began to define the mainstream. Stuart worked as a DJ at Live 105 for 14 years and soaked up the sounds of bands like R.E.M., the Cure, Pet Shop Boys, Roxy Music, U2 and the Clash.

The most difficult period of his time at Live 105, Stuart says, was weathering the storm of Seattle bands that dominated music for the first half of the '90s. It was the overwhelmingly dark music of groups like Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden that had Stuart thinking about a different profession.

"It was really a whole form of music that came out that was just depressing. If I was a troubled teen at the time, I probably would have really listened to it," says Stuart. "I considered getting out of radio during the whole grunge-on-the-radio movement. I really considered walking away from it because it was so depressing."

But then acts like No Doubt and Green Day came along to add a bit of levity and light to the Seattle bands' gloom and doom and, for Big Rick Stuart, music became fun again.

And music is still fun for Stuart, although the music he is playing has changed quite a bit. Since late 2000, Stuart has worked for KFOG, a station that answers upon its promise of "true variety" with a mix of classic rock bands like the Rolling Stones and The Who and new acts such as Phish and Shawn Colvin.

Stuart works the evening shift, from 4 to 11 p.m., playing acts like Norah Jones, Jackson Browne, the Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix and countless other performers.

"The great thing about KFOG is that there is a 10,000-song library," Stuart says. "There are just so many songs."

So many songs. So little time. Luckily, Big Rick Stuart plans on sticking around at KFOG for quite a while. Even after all these years, the Oakland-based DJ is still fascinated by radio.

"There's a lot that is good about radio," Stuart states. "Unfortunately, the perception is that it is pretty stale. But I actually don't think that it is. There is a lot that is on radio. You can go up and down the dial and hear so many different types of music and, even, languages.

"It's a great medium. I still love radio. I love driving Interstate 5 at night, just hitting the seek button."