This Month
December 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Year Archive
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Recent Visitors
Allen Weiner - Sat 11 Oct 2008 09:56 AM MST 
Cristian - Mon 11 Aug 2008 08:39 AM MST 
Champion - Fri 01 Aug 2008 02:23 PM MST 
livefromabbeyroad - Fri 27 Jun 2008 01:30 PM MST 
mydogisbrown - Fri 09 May 2008 02:10 PM MST 
 Photos
 TV
 Movies
 Music
 Video
 music
 mpeg4
 radio
 sports
 blogs
 games
 movies
 retail
 travel
 search
 P2P
 gaming
 news
 MTV
 art
 BBC
 Google
 dogs
 ebay
 ESPN
 Yahoo
 AOL
 Tivo
 Wi Fi
 CNN
 iPod
 Apple
 China
 hotels
 MSN
 comedy
 sushi
 CES
 Sanyo
 Sirius
 crafts
 Amazon
 iFilm
 video
 Mexico
 Canada
 Korea
 snakes
 Muvee
 Veoh
 Cuba
 Japan
 Cubs
 beach
 Destin
 Kimmel
 Toledo
 London
 Dylan
 Sonos
 France
 Nokia
 ASU
 Giants
LiveMessage Alerts
Main Page  »  radio
View Article  Saying Goodbye to Howard Stern

When my 72-mile commute from Marin County to San Jose came to an end, my car-radio relationship with Howard Stern came to an end. Love him or hate him, he got me from my home to work in the wee hours and distracted me from the horror of my ride.

 

Today marks the last time I’ll be listening to Stern, live on K-ROCK, from my hotel in NY. That has also been a bit of traditional for me as a way of kicking off my travel work day off with a laugh. Howard is done (for now) on over the air radio in two days. In fact, Yahoo! will have a special online event to mark the day.

 

I toyed with the idea of buying a Sirrus radio, but decided against it. I just cannot imagine listening to Howard in my home in the morning. I have no commute, so his time on air does not coincide with any time I am in my car. So, like many others, today I’ll be saying goodbye to Howard Stern.

Good luck Howard; you may need it.

View Article  Is There Even a Future for Radio?

Maybe this ad exec is trying to soften the blow that radio--as we knew it--is fading fast.

"Radio is at the center of a perfect storm of technological threats," said David Verklin, chief executive of media buying agency Carat Americas. "It has to reinvent itself."