Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
The more you push the budgets up, the more you make records cost $20, the more you make records last 4 and 5 minutes on the radio.
The person who is in tune with the Universe becomes like a radio receiver, through which the voice of the Universe is transmitted.
I'm a bit of a nerd, I wouldn't mind working in a shop selling records, or having a radio show where I could play obscure singles.
We definitely set out to make a great 'radio' record. We set out to write great hooky choruses-but with verses that said something.
My maw died when I was 20. You tune into the radio or the telly and life goes on. Things keep on happening. The world doesnae stop.
But why is it that in music, anything more than 5 years old - apart from a few hits - is never played on radio to the young public?
I like radio better than television because if you make a mistake on radio, they don't know. You can make up anything on the radio.
This is the kind of problem you want to have! Country radio has been great to me my whole career. I can't thank those folks enough.
I had two different degrees: One in International Relations/Political Science and another degree in Radio and Television Production.
I'll never forget when I was, like, 17, and 'Highway to Hell' came on the radio, and I was like, 'Dude, listen to that guy's voice!'
On radio, I loved Noel Edmonds's Radio 1 breakfast show - and Tony Blackburn. I can still hear those bloody jingles deep in my brain.
I still believe in public radio's potential. Because it's the one mass medium that's still crafted almost entirely by true believers.
I was born during the Depression in a little community just outside Waco, and I grew up listening to Franklin Roosevelt on the radio.
I fell in love with jazz when I was 12 years old from listening to Duke Ellington and hearing a lot of jazz in New York on the radio.
[Frank] Sinatra, to everyone, even Tony Bennett, was such a huge influence because he had mastered not only music, but film and radio.
I did a radio interview for a station in Connecticut or something, and it was the worst interview ever. It was all yes and no answers.
You can get an awful lot of effects into the customer's mind for a great deal less time and money in radio than you can in television.
People get passionate about a song. It's been my experience if you put out radio candy, something commercial, it doesn't sell records.
I have a TV show, a radio show. I've authored two books. I own a construction company, own a commercial fishing lodge, and am a pilot.
And it's exactly what's wrong with the radio. It's like...anything that tries to appeal to everybody always ends up sounding so cheap.
My first job was singing on the Cas Walker radio show in Knoxville, Tennessee. I was about 10 years old, and I thought it was big time.
In relations with many domestically weak countries, a radio transmitter can be a more effective form of pressure than a squadron B-52s.
Local television news, on both radio and television, is so appalling. Makes print journalism look like the greatest stuff ever written.
You have to understand that teaching online is different, just like movies are different from the stage and TV is different from radio.
The radio even weren't allowed to say there was a Holocaust and people were being killed right, left and center in these terrible camps.
They told us to buy duct tape and portable radios so that if the world does end, we can all listen to Rush Limbaugh blame it on Clinton.
They were worried we wouldn't get any radio play at all[ for "A Deal with God" ]. That's why it was changed [to "Running Up That Hill"].
TV and radio debates seem inflamed, with all that shouting, but real disagreement is always avoided; they conceal their lack of content.
Radio is such a perfect medium for the transmission of poetry, primarily because there just is the voice, there's no visual distraction.
I think it quite likely that we are the only civilization within several hundred light years; otherwise we would have heard radio waves.
I have a weird sense that people ten years younger than me don't own a radio, or maybe they own a radio, but they don't call it a radio.
I've done radio interviews about this movie [42]. I feel I'm a part of this movie, since I knew Jackie Robinson. I was at his first game.
For me, personally, Im usually not on my phone that much. I prefer listening to old radio shows and watching foreign films than tweeting.
After twelve years in prison, I think I have listened to the radio maybe 30-40 times in all, and only when I have been without even a TV.
I love music, particularly Radiohead, TV on the Radio, The XX and Tribes - they're a great new band from Camden and well worth a look at.
As long as I'm still able to have a hit on the radio and sell a few albums and some tickets, I don't see that it would be worth retiring.
There's a little bit more of a freedom when you're doing radio play-by-play as opposed to television. I prefer the television side of it.
Radio was my lifeline as a kid growing up in Winnipeg in the 1950s. It connected me with the wider world outside our little prairie city.
We always knew Victoria was going into fashion, Mel C was going into music, Emma went into radio, and I wanted to do a bit of everything.
I hate going to bed. I read scripts, clean, listen to the radio - I've fallen asleep to 'This American Life' more times than I can count!
For me, personally, I'm usually not on my phone that much. I prefer listening to old radio shows and watching foreign films than tweeting.
'Welcome To New York' is one of those songs that, with just one single radio play, will make at least 10 New Yorkers move to Marfa, Texas.
Listening to Chris Moyles on Radio 1 is the most miserable thing any human being can do, but attending awards ceremonies isn't far behind.
Clear Channel owns all the major radio stations and venues. Most musicians aren't aware that a few people control so much of what we hear.
If you took any of my radio shows and you took the music out of them, they wouldn't be remotely the same thing. Music is really important.
I worked on the United Parcel Service truck, I sold home delivery of milk. But always, in the back of my mind, I wanted to get into radio.
I was definitely surprised when Talk Radio took off as a play. As a film it has become somewhere between a popular thing and a cult thing.
Most of the music you hear on the radio today is developed for making money. It doesn't feel true or honest. You can feel it in the music.
The outstanding scientific discovery of the twentieth century is not television, or radio, but rather the complexity of the land organism.
There is an element of mystique to radio, and I often listen to cricket commentary on radio, especially when one is stuck in a traffic jam.