Widebrim
I'll Lock Up
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Various L.A. stations (AM and FM) used to play them from time to time when I was a kid. I remember that NBC station KFI had a 50th anniversary, and I recorded quite a few of the old shows that were re-broadcast.
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. iancandler said:My first memories are listening to the radio with mum and my gran, after that a long gap to a few years ago where I by chance heard a re run of a fairly modern radio comedy called "old harry's game".
I searched it out online and that led to more radio comedy that just kept getting older and older.
I will admit though my favourites are relatively modern, namely "the navy lark", "hancocks half hour", "the goons" and finally "much binding on the marsh".
I know listen to BBC radio 7 everyday, all day, in fact I hardly watch TV now.
Widebrim said:Various L.A. stations (AM and FM) used to play them from time to time when I was a kid. I remember that NBC station KFI had a 50th anniversary, and I recorded quite a few of the old shows that were re-broadcast.
52Styleline said:I am old enough that I caught the very last of major radio network programming as a small child in the early 1950's. This was before anyone in my town had a tv set so radio continued to be our primary entertainment.
Although I was very young, enough of that exposure must have taken root in my "little gray cells" to motivate a lifelong enjoyment of OTR.
I was 15 years of age, lying in bed on Sunday nights trying desperately to stay awake until midnight when "Mystery Theater" was broadcast on Chum FM. lol
Wow, that really brought back memories! Glad to see I wasn't the only youngster that learned an appreciation of this long - gone art. Love the posts here...![]()
KFI currently uses as part of their station tag a vintage soundbite of an announcer saying, "This is KFI, Los Angeles, Earl C. Anthony, Incorporated". Earl C. Anthony was a Cadillac dealer in L.A. and a West Coast broadcasting pioneer who owned radio stations in L.A. and San Francisco. Interestingly enough, Anthony's broadcasting rival Don Lee owned a Packard dealership.