Radio football is football reduced to its lowest common denominator.
Watching television in those days was not the same experience as it is today. After years of listening to radio, we found the black-and-white images mesmerizing.
Radio is a really strange business now, too. There's a very narrow door and a very few people control what gets played.
Our parents came home one day and heard us, and they thought it was the radio, but our grandfather told them it was us.
There is a long history of newspapers being doomed. They were doomed by radio. They were doomed by television. They were probably doomed by the telegraph way back when.
My dad heard of a studio on the radio, and it was advertised as a place for kids to meet kids, and it was actually a studio, and that's where I met my manager and agent.
In 1918, when I was 6 or 7 years old, radio was just coming into use in the Great War.
I'm proud to have so many great friends at country radio who believe in what I do - thanks to all of them.
There were influences in my life that were more important than journalism, such as comic strips and radio.
You move differently than you do when you're filling the stage at Radio City. You have to be bigger than life there.
Radio, newspapers, they were normal parts of my life. In those days, you had to go somewhere to watch television and leave something to see it.
I grew up singing ballads, but what I really wanted to get into was the mainstream music on the radio because I really love the beats and everything.
It was very important to establish a sound, so that people heard a record on the radio and knew immediately that it was you.
Because of my background in theater and radio acting, I knew that I could make a living as an actor.
I always tell people I romanticize about doing something simple, like doing radio in northern California.
I've always been very left of center and the radio never had much diversity and film did.
Where radio is different than fiction is that even mediocre fiction needs purpose, a driving question.
If it weren't for radio programs like 'The George Jarkesy Show,' no one would know about 'The Amateur'.
When I was little, people like Talking Heads were on the radio. There was something geeky yet groundbreaking about them.
Until it's on the radio or online, it's not real. With U2, our album isn't finished until it's in the stores.
If you're an American kid, you can't help but be influenced by Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and the Rolling Stones because they're always on the radio.