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4,714 result(s) for "Radio hosts"
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'Outlaw' Tommy Smith Rides Again, in Heber
Smith came out of retirement Jan. 6 after three years of silence, joining Ali King Sugg's Heber Springs station, KSUG-FM,101.9, known as The Lake. Ironically, now he's back on the road, driving from Cabot to Heber Springs. Sugg, the daughter of Clinton radio station owner Sid King and sister to Little Rock broadcaster Ashley King, was unfamiliar with one of Smith's most outrageous Magic 105 routines, \"She asked me about Flash Me Fridays, \" Smith said.
If anything should happen
Introducing radio talk show host and amateur sleuth Kit Doyle in the first of this mystery series. When Kit Doyle's near-perfect mother tells her about the letter she's written and locked away--a letter to be read only 'if anything should happen' to her--Kit thinks she's being melodramatic. But the next day Kit's mother is dead--and what she reads in that letter will change Kit's life forever. Armed with nothing but the secret letter, a tight-lipped father, and some good friends at the radio station where she works, Kit sets out to learn the truth about the shady past her mother has kept hidden for so many years. But when a dead body turns up, Kit realizes that at least one person is determined to stop her finding out the truth-- whatever it takes.
Performing personality
This book examines how radio announcers construct, prepare, and perform their on-air personalities during a time when the radio industry is fighting to stay relevant amid expanding media options. Crider conducted interviews with key on-air personnel at eleven broadcast stations in order to analyze how each individual created a narrative on-air personality, conducted conversations outside of their performance, were affected by the setting and situation, embraced the role of the listening audience, and reduced the social distance between them and listener. Crider argues that the successful deployment of on-air identity across multiple channels (in-person, online, and through social media as well as broadcast) provides assurance that a space for radio will remain despite the expanding number of media options.
Wanted: Job in Radio. Experience: Legendary
Outtakes The voice on the phone jolted me back four decades, to 1980, freshman year at the University of Central Arkansas. Freed in the 1990s from FCC rules capping ownership at one AM station and one FM station per market, chains now dominate the industry. [...]Smith ran afoul of corporate management not long after Janet Jackson's Super Bowl \"wardrobe malfunction,\" which unnerved media executives, Wood said.
Airwave trailblazer
After studying writing and music in college, I started volunteering in public radio and eventually secured a late-night slot to air forgotten documentaries on WNYC - New York Public Radio. From the beginning, Radiolab had a digital sensibility, a sense of speed and density that some have heralded as the future of public radio and others have complained is too jittery.
O'Riley Out At From the Top
Christopher O'Riley recently reported that he is no longer with NPR's \"From the Top.\" He was informed by Executive Director Gretchen Nielsen that this upcoming season would be his last. \"From the Top\" plans to use guest hosts going forward.