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Thread: How Did You Discover Old Time Radio?

  1. #51
    Familiar Face p71towny's Avatar
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    Not able to get to bed when I was about 10 or so in the early 90s I was messing with my radio and found 1040 W.H.O. out of DesMoines Iowa. It made it to Westerville O.H. They had a show called Rejection Slip Theater and a new show featuring Artie Azettie?? Anyways, I'd listen to that and original old shows and was hooked. I listen to A.M. 740 @ 10pm eastern now to catch the shows. I'd love to buy box sets like DVD series of all the shows.
    Chris - a 20th century man

  2. #52
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    hey p71! thanks for reminding me of old who out of des moines........i used to listen to it too! couldn't remember the name of it so i didn't list it. Used to spend alot of nights next to my crosley bakelite dashboard model listening to them too! great memories!

  3. #53
    Call Me a Cab Amy Jeanne's Avatar
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    I've always known about it since I was a kid. Of course, we used to make fun of my dad and ask him if he sat and "watched" the radio when he was younger

    I never actively started listening to it until about 2008, though. It was when I got my iPod and was able to download episodes into that and listen at work.

  4. #54
    Practically Family JimWagner's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 52Styleline
    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.

  5. #55
    New In Town ~Kate~'s Avatar
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    I discovered OTR quite by accident back when I was in high school. I was actually watching Foamy Videos (a foulmouthed cartoon squirrel) and looked at the websites list of recommended links. One of these was to a website that sold OTR recordings. Before that I didn't even know such things were available. I listened to a few of the sample episodes and was hooked!
    http://vintageinamodernworld.blogspot.com/

    I like old things, they make me feel sad.
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  6. #56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mugwump View Post
    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.
    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...
    And your first sentence brought back to me the memory of taking the radio into a dark closet and listening to it in there! (I think it was broadcast during the day...and yes, I was a pretty weird kid!) I'd forgotten that!
    More than somewhat.

  7. #57
    I'll Lock Up Widebrim's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by V.C. Brunswick View Post
    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.
    I've got to check that out.
    1. John 3:16, 17
    2. Dress to please yourself, but do take others into some consideration.

    -Lee

  8. #58
    Familiar Face Mark D's Avatar
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    I was fortunate enough, when I was 16 or 17 years old, to live next to a old woman. One day I saw this woman trying to drag something rather large out to the street. I went over to help her and found that it was an antique radio. She said that she was throwing it away, but I could have it if I wanted it. Turns out the thing was a full cabinet '36 Stromberg-Carlson. An absolutely gorgeous radio with one of the most beautiful art-deco dials that I've ever seen. It still worked and she even gave me a few extra tubes.

    Fast forward a few years; I was playing around on it one night and came across Danny-Stiles doing his late night big band/dixieland/swing show that he used to have on 1560 AM in NY. That music coming out of that radio...the dial glowing and lighting up the room. I was absolutely hooked.

  9. #59
    "A List" Customer CharlieB's Avatar
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    Growing up, my dad loved to listen to an old AM radio program called "Sentimental Journey" (theme song, of course was the tune of that name).

    As a teenager, I loved the CBS Radio Mystery Theater, with E. G. Marshall. There is something really spooky about listening to these in a dark room (just before going to sleep, no less).

    Anyone else a fan of CRMT?
    "Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left"

  10. #60
    New In Town JFriday's Avatar
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    My first experience with OTR was through several local radio stations that played radio drama and comedy at various times late at night in the mid 1970s. While my well intentioned parents would put me to sleep early, I have never slept much and would wake up to start my day around 0100h. I would turn the radio on low and listen to the shows for hours. A mystery-detective fan, the best hours were spent listening to The Shadow, Dragnet, Johnny Dollar, Philip Marlow and Suspense (You``re always right with Autolight!). One of the stations also played Big Band, which I grew up with in the day hours, my parents being older and having grown up during 1940s. This may well be one of the reasons that the Lounge, the Era and its conventions forms such a massive component of my life still, as it did when I was young. Our last OTR playing station, CFMS, changed format in the 90`s and for years I was left with the open reel tapes I had made those late nights years before. Five years ago XM entered my life and I am listening to classic radio drama now as I write this reply.

    Keep Listening,
    Friday

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