I look at radio as gone … Piracy is the new radio, that’s how music gets around.

I studied English literature in university, and then I went straight into radio.

As soon as I see period costume, I turn off. It's like hearing drama on Radio 4.

I listen to mostly-classical music, but mostly by radio - I'm not an audiophile.

Before, I was more concerned with getting on the radio, like many young artists.

When I made hip-hop, I made hip-hop. I didn't make R&B or make it for the radio.

I had a hit single on the radio for 30 days before I graduated from high school.

It was hard to work and work and work and not get your music played on the radio.

An ideal's love-fraught, imperious call That bides the spheres become articulate.

In the 30 years of my career, I have explored all possible mediums, except radio.

I'm somebody who doesn't believe in conforming to maybe whatever is on the radio.

I remember thinking, 'I don't know if I can do radio.' I never even listen to it.

The radio of my youth ... is now a quaint memory replaced by computer hard drives.

A lot of the bars are really nice to me now because they've heard me on the radio.

I like radio and live performing stuff. I don't like the television stuff as much.

There's nothing like live radio. I like the challenge. Throw it my way. Let me go!

It’s no more dangerous to society than a radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds.

I was an avid radio fan when I was a boy, as well as a great lover of comic strips.

I don't really listen to the radio too much. I know that one song, "Hotline Bling."

I like 'My Ugly Duckling,' 'High School Rapper,' 'Newlywed Diary,' and 'Radio Star.'

I don't listen to the radio very much, but that could be because I don't have a car.

I think it's really cool when any of your songs play on the radio for the first time.

I think there's good music out there. I just think that radio stations don't play it.

The reason that conservative talk radio works is because there is an audience for it.

I love tuning into Radio 1 on a Friday night after training and hearing the new stuff.

I knew I was an unwanted baby when I saw that my bath toys were a toaster and a radio.

I had no trouble going from radio to TV - I just thought of TV as radio with pictures.

I started in radio, again accidentally. I wasn't looking for this kind of work at all.

I loved radio for the music, concerts, parties and to think you could get paid for it.

I listened to oldies radio stations as a kid; lots of Kinks and Beatles and '50s hits.

In 1918, when I was 6 or 7 years old, radio was just coming into use in the Great War.

I was spending my own money on videos, spending my own money on radio, doing all that.

I was born in 1942, so I was mainly aware of Howard Hughes' name on RKO Radio Pictures.

I was a radio jockey after graduation. I was 22, the youngest RJ in Delhi at that time.

American media has just become talk radio, incredibly partisan name-calling and op-eds.

John R. told me you don't work for the radio station. You work for the people out there.

I grew up in New York wanting to be like those funny men in the movies and on the radio.

Whatever had been on the radio in the '60s; I mean we were always listening to the radio

I think we're going to have to forget about the radio and just go back to word of mouth.

I mean it's - it is hard to find a voice on talk radio that is not a conservative voice.

George is a radio announcer, and when he walks under a bridge... you can't hear him talk.

Nobody wants to hear R&B. It's sad. If you want to be on the radio you got to stay young.

The radio has nothing to do with metal's existence or non-existence. It's for trend only.

I've always been very left of center and the radio never had much diversity and film did.

Very rarely will you listen to the radio in a judgmental way, the way you'll watch telly.

The radio was my big influence. Comedy came from the instinctual feel I had for language.

I still tune in to the radio and listen to pop music and enjoy it as much as I ever have.

Whatever had been on the radio in the '60s; I mean we were always listening to the radio.

I could listen to the radio and I had access to books from time to time. Not all the time.

But you know, I always said that no one else on my block was on the radio, and it was fun.

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