Top 1200 Radio Stations Quotes & Sayings - Page 17

Explore popular Radio Stations quotes.
Last updated on November 18, 2024.
As far back as I can remember, the radio held a special fascination for me.
I don't listen to the radio very much, but that could be because I don't have a car.
Classic Rock radio gave us our longevity. — © George Thorogood
Classic Rock radio gave us our longevity.
Kosovo is an agricultural economy particularly. It also has a couple of good power stations that exported power, and the big cooperative which they had there in the mining field is no longer functioning. So there is no immediate employment available for people in the industrial sector. All that needs to be going. But you will remember that it is part of Yugoslavia, and much of its trade and its dependence was on Serbia and Montenegro.
I like listening to my playlist on the iPod. I don't want radio with commercials.
I studied English literature in university, and then I went straight into radio.
Science is dangerous. There is no question but that poison gas, genetic engineering, and nuclear weapons and power stations are terrifying. It may be that civilization is falling apart and the world we know is coming to an end. In that case, why no turn to religion and look forward to the Day of Judgment, ... [being] lifted into eternal bliss ... [and] watching the scoffers and disbelievers writhe forever in torment.
There was never a golden era of American radio as far as I can tell.
Anytime in radio that you can reach somebody on an emotional level, you're really connecting.
In country radio, everybody has such a connection and a bond. So you've got to meet them.
To ask "Where in your brain is intelligence?" is like asking "Where is the voice in the radio?"
The sheer genius of talk radio and Townhall.com is that the environment is so interactive.
Radio is called a medium because it is rare that anything is well done. — © Fred Allen
Radio is called a medium because it is rare that anything is well done.
Politics is developing more comedians than radio ever did.
After quitting radio I was able to live on the money I saved on aspirins.
The reason that conservative talk radio works is because there is an audience for it.
I have a real issue with radio these days. I just am not into the current music.
In the 30 years of my career, I have explored all possible mediums, except radio.
I was taught in radio: if somebody is talking, then you don't talk over them.
We're more into expressing ourselves than making radio hits.
I get scripts all the time, but I read this [Baggage Claim] thoroughly, and I loved it. It was light hearted, cute, sweet, and funny. I told my agent that I liked the script, but I did let my acceptance of the role slide a little, until I was watching television one day; scrolling through the stations, and there was this play. And I don't like plays made for the screen. But, this one, "Suddenly Single", caught my attention.
The fact we get played on the radio now blows our minds.
A poem is like a radio that can broadcast continuously for thousands of years.
My wife works odd hours as a journalist for breakfast radio.
I never listen to the radio to keep up with current trends.
I like to write books where I get a question on the radio, and I don't have an answer for it.
Back in East Texas, all three networks have stations in my hometown of Tyler, and for a town that small, 85,000, to have all three networks, they all have their own news programs, six and 10, and they're always looking for news. Back when I was a judge, they were constantly coming to the courthouse and asking for comments.
Ironically at drama school I was told I didn't have a voice conducive for radio.
I devoured everything on the radio, I felt like I knew music.
Radio broadcasting was only 25 years old when I was born in 1932.
My first gig was at Radio City Music Hall when I was 13.
There's whole television stations, magazines, organizations devoted to analyzing every up-and-down twist and turn, IPO, everything that happens in the formal economy. And yet the informal economy, these black and gray markets, actually make up for almost half of the global economy. And there's so little information that we have about them.
He (Sandy Koufax) throws a 'radio ball,' a pitch you hear, but you don't see.
I think I heard it [ Ferris Bueller's Day Off ] earlier. This was being played on a station in San Francisco called Live 105, which was a new wave station. It was one of the first stations to change its format in the early '80s. There was this wave of really strange music coming from Europe like Kraftwork and Freur.
For 50 years, nuclear power stations have produced three products which only a lunatic could want: bomb-explosive plutonium, lethal radioactive waste and electricity so dear it has to be heavily subsidised. They leave to future generations the task, and most of the cost, of making safe sites that have been polluted half-way to eternity.
Seriously, he is just a voice on the radio, unlike the ones in your head, you don't have to do what he tells you to do.
Don't ever call me a bottler on the radio with thousands of people listening
You may not like the humor, but that is why every radio has an on-off button. — © Mel Karmazin
You may not like the humor, but that is why every radio has an on-off button.
Somebody once said I had a face for radio and a voice for newspapers.
I do not think that the radio waves I have discovered will have any practical application.
A good radio show will captivate you, and it's active listening. It's not in the background.
I don't get played on radio anymore. Once you're over 40, forget it.
I don't really have anything nice to say about pop-country radio.
I was on my way to the gym. It was incredible. I was screamin at cars, 'That's me on the radio!
The radio was an improvement on the telegraph but it didn't have the same exponential, transformative effect.
I'm not sure how we exist, as an artist, without country radio.
Our news is Fox News. It's a cable channel and has nothing to do, frankly, with the entertainment area of the company. It's the model of how this company was launched, and there are a lot of independent stations and Fox O&Os who have hugely successful news that our programming is the lead-in for.
The radio is in the hands of such a lot of fools tryin' to anesthetize the way that you feel. — © Elvis Costello
The radio is in the hands of such a lot of fools tryin' to anesthetize the way that you feel.
It’s no more dangerous to society than a radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds.
You can't have silence on the radio; people will turn away from the station.
I fell in love with radio once I started working there, and I never stopped.
Every day FM radio ran out of hours, not music.
Central Europe is full of little countries standing shoulder to shoulder with no window to the sea. They are like the passengers in a rush-hour train which has stopped between stations for three centuries. And they all hate one another. And they're all crushed together waving their national flags, clanking their national chains, jabbering their national language.
I enjoy listening to contemporary rock on the college stations while I'm taking long walks, love gospel and soul music, am fascinated by hip-hop and rap as the new kind of urban 'beat' poetry and, come to think of it, find something interesting about just any kind of music.
I always wanted to be on the radio. But my background is more entertainment than journalism.
I've never, like some people are, been embarrassed to be in radio.
I feel quite lucky to have the platforms I have on both television and radio.
The sound of the radio fades to nothing because the waves just can't reach
I kind of have to take pieces of myself to fit what it is that radio wants.
It feels so satisfying to hear a song I wrote come out of the radio.
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