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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 04:32 pm
http://img106.exs.cx/img106/4580/goatsonvwfromlettyresized9ad.jpg
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 04:40 pm
Very Happy Okay, ehBeth. I sent that pix to Walter and Bo, but somehow, I was afraid that Gus might be searching for his lost animals.

Listeners, that was another of our lovely photographers who does wonders with placing pictures in the proper place.

For the goat song, see here:

http://www.sterlingtimes.co.uk/bill_goats_gruff.htm

Follow the directions, listeners.
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 06:31 pm
When I was about six or seven they often played the Billygoat's Rag on radio.

Billygoat chewed on an old tin can
Nannygoat chewed on a frying pan
Billygoatsaid I love you
Nannygoat said I love you too

Each line punchuated by "Bah bah bah." There was more music than singing.
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panzade
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 06:32 pm
Who was that by?
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 06:36 pm
I don't recall.
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 06:51 pm
What is the personality of the Pygora?

Pygoras have the docility of the Angora and the spunk and playfulness of the Pygmy. They have the curiosity of the cat and experience their world like a 2-year-old human; everything new must be tasted!

The goats on my son's VW, were actually eating the antenna.

I smiled when I saw edgar's post, listeners, because it reminded me of Old Dan Tucker.

Ah, I think I just remembered Heidi.
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 07:09 pm
Did someone say Heidi? I was just thinking about Heidi and the Super Bowl.

A Jay Leno quote mentioning Heidi and the Super Bowl:

"NBC is televising this year's Super Bowl. NBC is the network that years ago brought you the famous Jets-Raiders game that was cut short for the movie Heidi. Remember that one? The executive who made the decision still is working at NBC. I haven't met him, but then I don't get down to the boiler room much."

"There's nothing like the thrill we Americans get at the moment of the Super Bowl kickoff. It means the pregame shows are over."

"This year, like every year, two teams will face each other in the Super Bowl. One team will win and know what it's like to be a champion. The other team will lose and know what it's like to be a Republican."

I'm not an avid football fan, but it would be nice to see those Pittsburgh Steelers win. Very Happy

"Beer companies will spend millions just to market their products to beer drinkers during this one game. It's too bad beer drinkers are usually in the bathroom during the commercials."

"One beer company has an interesting Super Bowl promotion. So you don't miss a minute of Super Bowl action, with every six pack of beer you buy, you get a free box of Depends."

"As you know, the Super Bowl is very popular all over the world. This year, the game is even being televised in Russia. I bet the Russians will be oohing and aahing. Not at the game -- at all those commercials for Charmin toilet paper and the Sizzler."

"Do you know why American-style football hasn't really taken off in the rest of the world? Because it's impossible to describe how big a football field is to someone who's not familiar with something 'the size of a football field.' What do you say? 'It's half the size of two football fields?'"

"Strange, but in England they think soccer is football. Of course, in England they think princes and princesses live happily ever after."

"And finally, when the Super Bowl ends, it begins a very depressing time for American men. They look around and realize that at some point during the season their wives left them."
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 07:33 pm
Raggedy, you are absolutely the redeemer of lost souls.

Heidi Fleiss. my goodness, just call me madam.


I hear singing and there's no one there
I smell blossoms and the trees are bare
All day long I seem to walk on air
I wonder why, I wonder why
I keep tossing in my sleep at night
And what's more I've lost my appetite
Stars that used to twinkle in the skies
Are twinkling in my eyes I wonder why

(You don't need analyzing
It is not so surprising
That you feel very strange but nice
Your heart goes pitter patter
I know just what's the matter
Because I've been there once or twice
Put your head on my shoulder
You need someone who's older
A rub down with a velvet glove
There is nothing you can take
To relieve that pleasant ache
You're not sick, you're just in love)
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 07:41 pm
No, not that Heidi, Letty. Very Happy A movie about Heidi, the goat girl (I don't remember who played her) broke right into the game .

"Heidi" (Nov. 17, 1968)
With 65 seconds left in the Jets-Raiders game and the Jets up 32-29, NBC followed its schedule and cut off its broadcast, lest those waiting for the movie "Heidi" be kept waiting. The Raiders rallied for two touchdowns and won 43-32, and NBC received thousands of angry calls, causing its switchboard to break down. "
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 07:53 pm
War of the Worlds, Orson Welles,
And The Invasion from Mars

The ability to confuse audiences en masse may have first become obvious as a result of one of the most infamous mistakes in history. It happened the day before Halloween, on Oct. 30, 1938, when millions of Americans tuned in to a popular radio program that featured plays directed by, and often starring, Orson Welles. The performance that evening was an adaptation of the science fiction novel The War of the Worlds, about a Martian invasion of the earth. But in adapting the book for a radio play, Welles made an important change: under his direction the play was written and performed so it would sound like a news broadcast about an invasion from Mars, a technique that, presumably, was intended to heighten the dramatic effect.

As the play unfolded, dance music was interrupted a number of times by fake news bulletins reporting that a "huge flaming object" had dropped on a farm near Grovers Mill, New Jersey. As members of the audience sat on the edge of their collective seat, actors playing news announcers, officials and other roles one would expect to hear in a news report, described the landing of an invasion force from Mars and the destruction of the United States. The broadcast also contained a number of explanations that it was all a radio play, but if members of the audience missed a brief explanation at the beginning, the next one didn't arrive until 40 minutes into the program.

At one point in the broadcast, an actor in a studio, playing a newscaster in the field, described the emergence of one of the aliens from its spacecraft. "Good heavens, something's wriggling out of the shadow like a gray snake," he said, in an appropriately dramatic tone of voice. "Now it's another one, and another. They look like tentacles to me. There, I can see the thing's body. It's large as a bear and it glistens like wet leather. But that face. It...it's indescribable. I can hardly force myself to keep looking at it. The eyes are black and gleam like a serpent. The mouth is V-shaped with saliva dripping from its rimless lips that seem to quiver and pulsate....The thing is raising up. The crowd falls back. They've seen enough. This is the most extraordinary experience. I can't find words. I'm pulling this microphone with me as I talk. I'll have to stop the description until I've taken a new position. Hold on, will you please, I'll be back in a minute."

As it listened to this simulation of a news broadcast, created with voice acting and sound effects, a portion of the audience concluded that it was hearing an actual news account of an invasion from Mars. People packed the roads, hid in cellars, loaded guns, even wrapped their heads in wet towels as protection from Martian poison gas, in an attempt to defend themselves against aliens, oblivious to the fact that they were acting out the role of the panic-stricken public that actually belonged in a radio play. Not unlike Stanislaw Lem's deluded populace, people were stuck in a kind of virtual world in which fiction was confused for fact.

News of the panic (which was conveyed via genuine news reports) quickly generated a national scandal. There were calls, which never went anywhere, for government regulations of broadcasting to ensure that a similar incident wouldn't happen again. The victims were also subjected to ridicule, a reaction that can commonly be found, today, when people are taken in by simulations. A cartoon in the New York World-Telegram, for example, portrayed a character who confuses the simulations of the entertainment industry with reality. In one box, the character is shown trying to stick his hand into the radio to shake hands with Amos n' Andy. In another, he reports to a police officer that there is "Black magic!!! There's a little wooden man -- Charlie McCarthy -- and he's actually talking!"

In a prescient column, in the New York Tribune, Dorothy Thompson foresaw that the broadcast revealed the way politicians could use the power of mass communications to create theatrical illusions, to manipulate the public.

"All unwittingly, Mr. Orson Welles and the Mercury Theater of the Air have made one of the most fascinating and important demonstrations of all time," she wrote. "They have proved that a few effective voices, accompanied by sound effects, can convince masses of people of a totally unreasonable, completely fantastic proposition as to create a nation-wide panic.

"They have demonstrated more potently than any argument, demonstrated beyond a question of a doubt, the appalling dangers and enormous effectiveness of popular and theatrical demagoguery....

"Hitler managed to scare all of Europe to its knees a month ago, but he at least had an army and an air force to back up his shrieking words.

"But Mr. Welles scared thousands into demoralization with nothing at all."

In the 1950s, America had another taste of the power that simulations have, to draw people into a world of delusional fantasy, when paired with mass communications. This time it was revealed that a number of television game shows were simulations, in which contestants who knew the answers ahead of time were pretending to guess at their responses. But unlike the invasion from Mars, here the fakery was unambiguously intentional; it was the work of producers who had concluded they could create fictional game shows that would be more exciting than the real thing.

Once again, there was a shocked reaction from the public. Once again, those involved became objects of public anger. And, as happened with the Orson Welles broadcast, an effort was made to ensure that such manipulations wouldn't recur.

But in 1990, it happened again. Audiences around the world discovered that they were taken in by the ultimate Hollywood illusion in which two performers faked their own talent, lip-syncing, to create the impression they were singing. What millions of fans had believed were two talented singers was actually a composite, another seamless interweaving of sensory simulations in which two people provided the visuals, while vocalists provided the audio.

As in the previous two instances, there was a stunned response. But unlike the experience of 1938 or even the 1950s, the social context was different because simulations had become commonplace, and attempts to use them to trick the public were the rule rather than the exception. Also by this time, a global culture had developed, which meant that tens of millions of people around the world were drawn into the same illusion.

One might say that War of the Worlds and the game show scandal foreshadowed the age of simulation that was still to come. Allowing for a little poetic overstatement, the Milli Vanilli scandal served as a rite of passage or symbolic marker, making clear that we now live in an age of simulation confusion in which our tendency to mistake fakes for what they imitate has become one of the characteristic problems of the age.

More to the point, we live in a time in which the ability to create deceptive simulations, especially for television, has become essential to the exercise of power. And the inability to see through these deceptions has become a form of powerlessness. Those who let themselves be taken in by the multiple deceptions of politics, news, advertising and public relations, are doomed, like the more gullible members of the radio audience in 1938, to play a role in other people's dramas, while mistakenly believing that they are reacting to something genuine.


The Age of Simulation http://www.transparencynow.com/welles.htm
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 08:14 pm
Ah, edgar. Verisimilitude. That's what Orson the oracle had that the world lacks. He knew how to fool with finesse.

Raggedy, Are we ready for some football? Never. Very Happy
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 08:18 pm
Ready for football? Well, maybe just a little for the big day tomorrow if the city can find a place to dump the snow. Very Happy
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 08:24 pm
I'm an avid Steelers fan. There is one game I will definitely watch tomorrow.
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 08:53 pm
Well, here's hoping they win, Edgar.

http://www.post-gazette.com/images3/20050123PDsnowheinzfield_V_230.jpg

Peter Diana, Post-Gazette
DIGGING OUT: A worker removes snow from the Heinz Field bleachers after an early morning storm rolled through the region. Weather forecasts call for temperatures to drop and the wind to pick up, which will make for a very chilly evening for Sunday's AFC title game.

A blizzard won't keep the Steeler fans away. Very Happy
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:10 pm
If I had to bet money I would be forced to give New England a three point edge, but I'm hoping their kicker misses even the point blank field goals again this week.
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:16 pm
I hope so, too. Smile
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:28 pm
Listeners, support the team,
And watch them preen,
And place your bets on steelers.
Look at that small pigskin
Go,
I think they may have feelers.

Whack--down for the count

Oops, wrong sport.
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:31 pm
Still in a Jim Reeves mood, I dedicate this one to the ones with family overseas tonight.

Distant Drums

I hear the sound of distant drums
Far away, far away
And if they call for me to come
Then I must go and you must stay

So Mary marry me, let's not wait
Let's share all the time we can before it's too late
Love me now for now is all the time there may be
If you love me Mary, Mary marry me

I hear the sound of bugles blow
Far away, far away
And if they call, then I must go
Across the sea, so wild and grey.

So Mary marry me, let's not wait
For the distant drums might change our wedding date
And love me now, for now is all the time there may be
If you love me Mary, Mary marry me
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:34 pm
Laughing

From The Pittsburgh Post Gazette:

"Steelers fans know their limits in cheering for the team -- There's one thing you can count on at a Steelers game: reasonably well-behaved fans. Head east or west, and things are different, but in Pittsburgh the only hard hits are on the field, and that's just fine with Pittsburgh police. "I think most people know the limit, and they choose not to push the envelope," said Sgt. John Fisher, who's been working Steelers games since Heinz Field opened in 2001."

This listener is wondering who wrote that little gem and wouldn't count on it.
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 22 Jan, 2005 09:41 pm
Oh to have the old steel curtain out there tomorrow.
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WA2K Radio is now on the air, Part 3 - Discussion by edgarblythe
 
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