The college stations have a big voice, and I would like to become more involved with them. I would like to have symposiums with the members of various college radio stations.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When I went to Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, what I really wanted to be was a radio announcer.
Despite whatever commercial kind of success you might have or radio success, I don't want to do something just to get as many people as possible to listen.
I started in radio, again accidentally. I wasn't looking for this kind of work at all.
The radio's pretty much always on, and I also listen to some American podcasts, such as for 'National Public Radio' and 'Newsweek'.
Radio is the art form of sports casting. If you're any good, you can do a great job on radio.
Radio stations play what they believe is in, and they all talk to each other.
Politics aside, it will be hard for any new liberal radio network to outdo the professionalism of NPR.
I grew up years ago doing something that unfortunately doesn't hardly exist any more, a medium called Radio.
The thing that interests me least about the radio business is the radio business. But I've had to learn a little bit about it. It's not rocket science: You get ratings, that's good.
I only got interested in radio once I talked my way into an internship at NPR's headquarters in Washington, D.C. in 1978, never having heard the network on the air.