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10 new of 34 responses total.
mcnally
response 25 of 34: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 01:06 UTC 2000

  I'm not familiar with banda..  Norteno and tejano are music genres that
  started in the areas on either side of the Mexican/American border and
  have filtered into other regions in the USA. 

  I tend to think of norteno as primarily originating in north-central and
  north-western Mexico (e.g. Chihuahua, Baja California) and tejano as 
  being more Tex-Mex but I could easily be wrong -- my exposure has been
  limited here in the American midwest.

gypsi
response 26 of 34: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 15:15 UTC 2000

The Planet is 96.3 WPLT out of Detroit.
orinoco
response 27 of 34: Mark Unseen   Feb 16 19:11 UTC 2000

_Oh,_ okay....
For years I've been hearing that as WBLT, as in bacon lettuce and
tomato, and thinking "damn, they must've been running low on letters to use".
PLT makes more sense.
lumen
response 28 of 34: Mark Unseen   Feb 21 22:00 UTC 2000

resp:25 right.  I'll have to check on banda-- can't remember for sure 
if it's an actual style.  The Hispanic stations do play a little 
mariachi, too.
mikep
response 29 of 34: Mark Unseen   Mar 2 22:58 UTC 2000

Alice has been out here in the Bay Area for quite a while.  Decent
station...
polygon
response 30 of 34: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 01:40 UTC 2000

I listen to commercial music radio in the car, because (1) my tape player
doesn't seem to work right, and (2) I generally don't want to hear talk
from the radio when I'm driving.

I'm approximately *allergic* to radio commercials.  I will not sit through
them.  Back when they came up with "20 song blocks", I noticed that 20
songs in a row would be followed by 20 commercials in a row, so it made a
lot of sense to tune out as soon when the commercials started.

Much as it may be romantic and polically correct to like "personable DJs"
and despise "robot radio", what I want from the radio is music, no ads, no
idiotic DJ patter.

My station sequence (switch to the next when an ad or an idiot comes on) 
is 88.7, 93.9, 94.7, 94.9, 95.5, 96.3, 101.1, 102.9, 106.7.  If the ads
get really intolerable (e.g. a tour of that list finds no listenable music
going on anwhere), then I flee to NPR stations like WUOM, WKAR, WDET,
WEMU. 

In the morning, when commercial radio stations all have a heavy idiocy and
heavy ad format, there is usually no point in bothering with anything but
public radio. 

The proportion of radio time devoted to ads seems to be increasing,
especially in major markets like Detroit.  Detroit stations spend more
time on ads than say Lansing stations.

At home, when I'm not actually driving, there is almost never any reason
to listen to commercial radio.
redrover
response 31 of 34: Mark Unseen   Apr 21 20:52 UTC 2000

We had Alice here in st louis i believe...she didnt last to long and was
replaced by extreme radio which is a hardcore metal and rock station...when
extreme cropped up it had some sort of add campaign about killing alice and
a woman screaming if i remember correctly, over all i dont think she lasted
too long here
scg
response 32 of 34: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 05:55 UTC 2000

They had a radio station called Alice in Denver as well.
tpryan
response 33 of 34: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 15:32 UTC 2000

        At least Classic Rock 94.7fm is not sending its audience on a search of
the radio dial to find Alice, as they did many years ago then they where
digging on 'Star FM'.  I woke up someone at WCSX when I complained by 
saying "I didn't know you where losing in the ratings that bad to Star 97".
Then having to point out, only the loser would be putting down the leader.
brighn
response 34 of 34: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 00:35 UTC 2000

I hate it when radio stations insult other radio stations. The Bear (? I
think) had a bunch of ads mocking Arthur P. ("Coming up, three hits in a row,
on the flip side of this twenty-minute commercial break!"), and one of the
alt-rock stations (maybe the Planet) has that series "You don't have to sit
through this (burst of Kid Rock, Limp Bizkit, Staind, or Tool) to get to this
(start of next mildly-interesting alt-pop song)."

The problem with both ad series is, it made me want to listen to the radio
station they were mocking... I'd rather listen to Kid Rock and Staind than
Oasis and Goo Goo Dolls. I don't care where you were when we were getting
high. I wish there WAS a radio station that regularly played Staind and
Tool... RIF comes closest, but only when Art's at the helm, and then it
depends on his mood.
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