The nerve
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40 is a few dozen.
IDK who guy is
The guy in the photo? American electronic music producer and DJ Dillon Francis
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Stupid 106.5 in Sydney. Fuck me, so bloody sick of Sabrina Cuntpunters shitty songs multiple times a day, each day.
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On a less related note, I did not expect to see this meme format in 2025. Not that I mind tho ^^
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If anyone's is interested in a stream of modern rock that is devoted to new music, I can introduce you to the dj before he does a stream. I spoke with Alan Cross (From the Ongoing History of rock and roll) via email briefly about this DJ and Alan already knew who he was and there is video interview between the two of them as well
If interested send me a message, don't want to promote a link to something I support through patreon without permission, but I'm happy to share to anyone that's interested.
Last week was his first live show in a long time, and I'm glad he has decided to continue.
Hit me with that link!
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Back in the day I ran a small Shout cast server. Once had around 40 listeners. It made teenage me happy. In a broken voice, between tracks, I'd pretend to be a radio guy on my cheap desktop microphone (those white/grey/cream sticks, you know the ones I'm sure).
"Yo yo yo, that was a SICK beat, let's get on down to some more funky tunes!!!"Fun memories.
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Same with classic rock stations, I swear to fucking god Boston's 100.7 plays Turn the Page by Bob Seger or Metallica's cover daily at like 7:45am. That's usually followed by one of 3 AC/DC songs then 10-15 minutes of commercials since iHeartRadio bought them a while ago.
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This is why radio died. Rock stations playing Aerosmith, guns and roses and ac/DC on repeat. Instead of 5 minutes of something new. By 2010 most if us were leaving fm for pre-downloaded music, 2015 apps were widely available, by 2020, what even was radio
They walked to their own Graves and pulled the trigger
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Listener support doesn't mean they are NPR. Hate to nitpick most of the time but NPR can get bent for their corporate shilling.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Yeah, that's why I mentioned listener supported radio/community run. As a separate statement.
Honestly, it's the listener supported/community run radio stations that are the best.
I only mentioned NPR because that's just something the average North American can relate to. Also KEXP is affiliated with NPR. So it felt relevant to mention.
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Soma.fm forever
Boot Liquor changed my musical tastes forever!
They have a decent stand-alone app too. Lots of good stations.
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...are the "few dozen" songs the top 40...?
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As annoying as this is, it’s not really the radio station’s fault. Broadcast licenses for songs are cartoonishly expensive, so most stations can only afford to hold so many at a time.
So like most problems in the music industry, it’s due to the greed of the record companies.
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Yeah, that's why I mentioned listener supported radio/community run. As a separate statement.
Honestly, it's the listener supported/community run radio stations that are the best.
I only mentioned NPR because that's just something the average North American can relate to. Also KEXP is affiliated with NPR. So it felt relevant to mention.
The only affiliation KEXP has is with the University of Washington.
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Boot Liquor changed my musical tastes forever!
They have a decent stand-alone app too. Lots of good stations.
Boot Liquor became a MASSIVE source of family drama during a fishing tournament around 2008 or so.
We were tooting along in our boat, fishing the morning away when I decided to put Boot Liquor on.
Classics such as "I'm not drunk, I'm just drinking" and "If I ain't drunk, then I ain't drinking" were well received.
Then "Kiss You Down There" by Hackenshaw Boys came on, and my grandfather started to get VISIBLY angry about the content of the song. Him and my uncle started arguing about how it's just a silly song and that his 20 year old grandsons were perfectly fine listening to it.
Gramps was having none of it and flicked a cigarette butt at my uncle and all hell broke loose.
We lost 4 fishing rods during the scuffle, swallowed up by the merciless lake.
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...are the "few dozen" songs the top 40...?
Well minimum a "few dozen" would have to be at least 36 songs lol
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Seems like half the music on the radio nowadays sounds bored, depressed, or is a rehash/cover of an already existing song that's also half-baked.
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Boot Liquor became a MASSIVE source of family drama during a fishing tournament around 2008 or so.
We were tooting along in our boat, fishing the morning away when I decided to put Boot Liquor on.
Classics such as "I'm not drunk, I'm just drinking" and "If I ain't drunk, then I ain't drinking" were well received.
Then "Kiss You Down There" by Hackenshaw Boys came on, and my grandfather started to get VISIBLY angry about the content of the song. Him and my uncle started arguing about how it's just a silly song and that his 20 year old grandsons were perfectly fine listening to it.
Gramps was having none of it and flicked a cigarette butt at my uncle and all hell broke loose.
We lost 4 fishing rods during the scuffle, swallowed up by the merciless lake.
<chefs kiss>
Perfection!
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The only affiliation KEXP has is with the University of Washington.
wrote last edited by [email protected]And NPR handles the music licensing for the station. You can see them mentioned in multiple NPR annual reports as a member station, going as far back as 2001 when the affiliation started. Then as recently as 2011, after that NPR stopped reporting the NPR stations. Also there's a managed list on Wikipedia of all affiliated stations. Prior to 2001 though it had no affiliation with NPR.
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They even do live shows in their studio along with interviews of the bands, really great station
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This is why radio died. Rock stations playing Aerosmith, guns and roses and ac/DC on repeat. Instead of 5 minutes of something new. By 2010 most if us were leaving fm for pre-downloaded music, 2015 apps were widely available, by 2020, what even was radio
They walked to their own Graves and pulled the trigger
Companies like iheartradio and others killed radio. I got to experience a little taste of the old days just before it all transitioned. There was an actual person. In a studio. Behind a mic. It was so much fun. Now it's all syndicated, pre-recorded, pre-packaged bullshit sent out to 1,000 stations that all sound the same, playing at its preset time in an empty studio.