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Listening to the Radio (a dying pastime?)
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<blockquote data-quote="Fred Smith" data-source="post: 194450" data-attributes="member: 2233"><p>I remember being a kid and listening to the radio programs at night. I have no idea how I even found them, but one of the AM stations in Houston used to run an hour and a half of old radio shows on Sunday nights 20 years or so ago. They'd run a comedy (Jack Benny or something else), then a western (I remember the Cisco Kid), and then finish off with a mystery (Suspense, The Whistler, The Shadow, Inner Sanctum). Every Halloween, they would play the War of the Worlds broadcast, and a couple of hours of mysteries, always ending with The Tell Tale Heart.</p><p></p><p>A few years ago, I rediscovered these wonders. My mp3 players are currently full of old shows, and I love to sit outside and listen with a pipe and drink in hand. I think I'll go pack a bowl and listen to Dragnet now.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fred Smith, post: 194450, member: 2233"] I remember being a kid and listening to the radio programs at night. I have no idea how I even found them, but one of the AM stations in Houston used to run an hour and a half of old radio shows on Sunday nights 20 years or so ago. They'd run a comedy (Jack Benny or something else), then a western (I remember the Cisco Kid), and then finish off with a mystery (Suspense, The Whistler, The Shadow, Inner Sanctum). Every Halloween, they would play the War of the Worlds broadcast, and a couple of hours of mysteries, always ending with The Tell Tale Heart. A few years ago, I rediscovered these wonders. My mp3 players are currently full of old shows, and I love to sit outside and listen with a pipe and drink in hand. I think I'll go pack a bowl and listen to Dragnet now. [/QUOTE]
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