Top 1200 Radio Stations Quotes & Sayings - Page 19

Explore popular Radio Stations quotes.
Last updated on December 19, 2024.
I still tune in to the radio and listen to pop music and enjoy it as much as I ever have.
I knew I was an unwanted baby when I saw that my bath toys were a toaster and a radio.
I went into radio in 1965 when I got a license for CJOR 600 AM. It was my second business. — © Jim Pattison
I went into radio in 1965 when I got a license for CJOR 600 AM. It was my second business.
I've always been music-oriented. My dad was a musician, and I listened to the radio all of the time.
I bought a new Japanese car, I turned on the radio ... I don't understand a word they're saying.
I used to listen to songs on the radio and play that junk back on that little keyboard.
I had to be at least 8 or 9; I was listening to everything on the radio. You name it, I heard every song.
Im a big fan of martial arts films, novels and radio programs.
Maybe people are finally tiring of watered down grunge rock on the radio.
There's this corporate machine giving us a chance to access radio - though there's no guarantee.
It's in the films and songs and all your magazines. It's everywhere that you may go, the devil's radio.
I even played Jack Webb's partner on the radio version of Dragnet for a while.
I'm not in any way selling out by having a record that's good enough for radio. — © Donnis
I'm not in any way selling out by having a record that's good enough for radio.
I use every opportunity, whether on my radio show or on television, to break stereotypes.
I loved radio for the music, concerts, parties and to think you could get paid for it.
I quite often listen to Internet radio; especially the RnB section if I am jumpy.
Just because it's on the radio doesn't mean we have to suspend belief in the evidence of our senses.
I don't watch ESPN, don't listen to the radio. I just go home and deal with my family.
Misery is when you heard on the radio that the neighborhood you live in is a slum but you always thought it was home.
I decided to try radio as a source of livelihood because I like to eat regularly.
I hate the idea of having to conform with what's current and what sounds good on radio at the moment.
I would have to say News Radio is the highlight of my career. I love the character so much.
Like it or not, liberal radio hosts fail miserably in the spoken word format.
I just want to keep saturating the market and radio with as many hit records as I can.
Television and radio do a wonderful job in focusing attention on the problems of our society.
So I went and did an audition and became the biggest radio actor in Sydney, and that's how it all started.
I was an avid radio fan when I was a boy, as well as a great lover of comic strips
If it's done right, radio can just be far more important than television.
Doing radio commercials was how I was really able to leave my day job.
There are probably five songs in the world that I get excited about when I hear them on the radio.
I'd love to do radio plays. I think that one should be open to everything and shouldn't limit oneself.
Bigger shows, songs on the radio, more people aware of what I'm doing... all that, I'm ready!
Even in independent music, people push towards radio. It is very political.
The last thing I want to do is just be another voice on country music radio.
I like having the radio on, that way you're challenged to listen to things that aren't your choice.
In the Internet age, with the screaming on the radio, etc., it is hard to know what to believe and who is informed and who is not.
If you had a good radio - and everybody did in those days - you could find it.
There's so many great people in Country Radio, and I appreciate all the support they've given me. — © Jon Pardi
There's so many great people in Country Radio, and I appreciate all the support they've given me.
I love the fact that 35 years later, I still hear my songs on the radio.
Before, I was more concerned with getting on the radio, like many young artists.
It's in my blood to be on the radio every day. I've done it since I was 16 years old.
Probably from, like, 10 to 14 or 15, I would just listen to pop radio.
I'd like to do radio forever, really. I prefer it to telly. It's more immediate and I'm in control of it all.
In the late '90s, R&B was dominant in the radio, and the white kids were taking it mainstream.
I'm proud to have so many great friends at country radio who believe in what I do - thanks to all of them.
Nixon, with his mellifluous baritone, was a great politician for radio but creepy on TV.
Most television could be presented by a dachshund. Radio can't, although there are a lot of dachshunds in there.
I love singing along to the radio while I'm riding in the back of a squad car. — © Dane Cook
I love singing along to the radio while I'm riding in the back of a squad car.
It was amazing to me that, all of a sudden, I was hearing my music on the radio and coming out of cars.
It [ "Not For Long"] was the biggest song that I've had, and I actually heard it on the radio multiple times.
Most songs on the radio are so straightforward and it just doesn't open up people's minds.
To be given the Radio 1 breakfast show was huge, but I was partying so hard I barely remember it.
I had this old wind-up phonograph when I was a kid, and I'd listen to records. And the radio.
I'm not those kind of persons that's afraid to be on radio or TV, you know? I'm always the same.
With that radio I was always swimming with the current political streams in the West. I was never stranded.
The radio of my youth ... is now a quaint memory replaced by computer hard drives.
I was asked on a radio interview what my mission is, and I immediately blurted out, "God realization."
That radio was very important for me. It meant I always knew what was going on in the world.
But I never had that commercial opportunity to be played on the radio, so how could I be popular?
The base emotions Plato banned have left a radio-active and not radiant land.
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