I shall endeavor to do so, although it isn't always easy when you're typing half-asleep late into the night as I was. I just hope my clarification (the post you're responding to) was adequate. I didn't mean to put down all consultants -- the side-effect of everyone wanting them (homogenization from the DX'er's perspective) was the target of my lament, but that wasn't to say they didn't bring good to local radio. The much beloved soundtrack of my childhood was consultant Rick Carroll's KROQ, just for the record.May I politely suggest, then, that you choose your words a bit more cautiously when talking about us consultants? We've been attacked so often over the years -- usually blamed for things that happened which were not our doing -- that our skins are no longer thick enough to easily shake off more of the same.
OK, but every smartphone in the world works off of radio waves. It all goes through a transmitter. The cell site is the transmitter. If you are streaming via your phone in an automobile that phone is getting the Pandora, Spotify, or other programming via a transmission, just as the FM radio in the car would be getting audio programming via a transmission.Radio is a means of transmission. It is literally sound transmission via radio waves.
Pandora and anything else that doesn't go through a transmitter is audio.
Radio is in decline. Audio is not.
But by that logic, cosmic background noise from interstellar nebulae and stars would be radio too.OK, but every smartphone in the world works off of radio waves. It all goes through a transmitter. The cell site is the transmitter. If you are streaming via your phone in an automobile that phone is getting the Pandora, Spotify, or other programming via a transmission, just as the FM radio in the car would be getting audio programming via a transmission.
So one could argue that Pandora, Spotify, IHeart's platform, et. al. are Radio, especially in the case of IHeart or other Radio-related streaming sites.
They are. After all, radio-astronomy and radio-telescopes have been around for decades.But by that logic, cosmic background noise from interstellar nebulae and stars would be radio too.![]()
Anything that is generated as a modulated RF carrier is radio, if you want to get technical about it. There may be many different modes of transmission and content, but they are still radio.Radio as most people understand it is the experience delivered via RF. It's radio if it sounds like radio, regardless of if the medium is AM, FM, XM, IBOC, or 5G TCP/IP.
Radio as most people understand it is the experience delivered via RF. It's radio if it sounds like radio, regardless of if the medium is AM, FM, XM, IBOC, or 5G TCP/IP.
But can they play Hotel California and Brown Eyed Girl until you start pulling your hair out and tune to another star?They are. After all, radio-astronomy and radio-telescopes have been around for decades.But by that logic, cosmic background noise from interstellar nebulae and stars would be radio too.![]()
And that's what my response was essentially aimed at -- being too technical about it. Radio is the cultural and business phenomenon of broadcasting one-to-many for information and entertainment that became popular over RF. That phenomenon is no longer linked to RF and can exist separately from it. This is why someone sitting at a board playing records and taking to the audience over nothing more than a Shoutcast stream can be considered radio, while something like Spotify or Pandora cannot. The latter are not one-to-many shared communal experiences; they are cloud-based CD changers that uniquely serve you, whether driven by a playlist you manually populated, one someone else populated, or one that an algorithm that watches your behavior populates.Anything that is generated as a modulated RF carrier is radio, if you want to get technical about it.
This is so much fun.I agree. If you read Marconi's writings, what he was trying to invent was a form of wireless telegraphy. The main characteristic was that it was wireless. So using Marconi's own definition, if it's wireless, then it's radio.
I remember when Paul Harvey was on KGO back when it was worth listening to.
I think I remember hearing, by chance, some of his last few broadcasts. He sounded very hoarse and weak, and it didn't seem like he was going to be around much longer.
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I shall endeavor to do so, although it isn't always easy when you're typing half-asleep late into the night as I was. I just hope my clarification (the post you're responding to) was adequate. I didn't mean to put down all consultants -- the side-effect of everyone wanting them (homogenization from the DX'er's perspective) was the target of my lament, but that wasn't to say they didn't bring good to local radio. The much beloved soundtrack of my childhood was consultant Rick Carroll's KROQ, just for the record.![]()
Long story short: you can now say "I'm listening to the radio wirelessly" without being redundant.![]()
This is so much fun.
So, first, there was wireless, which was called radio because wireless radiated.
Next, what radio broadcast (the aural product) became such a powerful cultural institution that, to the ordinary man, the word radio became synonymous with that institution more than with the radiation medium.
Such that when that institution began appearing elsewhere than on wireless, it was still called radio. Example: Mike Horn's "Cable Radio Network" -- which was on coaxial cable television, not wireless.
Which then opened the door to internet streams being called radio -- whether one listened to them over ethernet, fiber, coax, or, ironically, over wireless (e.g. 802.11/5G).
But the catch was, those streams were only called radio if they sounded like (were formatted identically to) the aural product first invented on radio.
Otherwise (when they're glorified CD changers), those internet streams are called streaming, not radio. Even when they are experienced wirelessly instead of over wires.
Because as of modern times, the common man has completely re-defined the word "radio" away from meaning "wireless technology." He now just calls wireless "wireless," as Marconi originally did (see "wireless phones," "wireless laptops," "wireless devices," and "wireless speakers" -- none of which are called "radio phones," "radio laptops," "radio speakers," or what have you. The young even now refer to the energy these devices send/receive as "wireless signals, not "radio signals.").
Leaving the word "radio" to now mean just the cultural institution in common parlance, with only those of us who can remember The Before Times seeing it otherwise.
Long story short: you can now say "I'm listening to the radio wirelessly" without being redundant.![]()

That's no Cue-Master!Okay.
Now, if it's that simple, you should have no problem whatsoever getting every person under the age of 35 to stop asking the question "what's radio?"
But you won't, because they don't use that word. They understand "audio".
Telling them they're listening to radio will be about like my grandmother complimenting the "victrola" I bought myself with the money from my first real job:
View attachment 7635
And the following year you bought another one, a Numark mixer, and 'DJ Mikey-Mike' was born!No, but it wasn't bad for a 15-year-old kid making $1.65 an hour.
Seven years later, I retired it for one of these:
View attachment 7637
(Clears throat)And the following year you bought another one, a Numark mixer, and 'DJ Mikey-Mike' was born!
Word, Daw.
And my mother, until she died in the 1990's, still called the refrigerator an "ice box".Okay.
Now, if it's that simple, you should have no problem whatsoever getting every person under the age of 35 to stop asking the question "what's radio?"
But you won't, because they don't use that word. They understand "audio".
Telling them they're listening to radio will be about like my grandmother complimenting the "victrola" I bought myself with the money from my first real job:
My first one was similar to this....No, but it wasn't bad for a 15-year-old kid making $1.65 an hour.
Seven years later, I retired it for one of these:
View attachment 7637

And most of us still talk about "records" and "albums". Yet most don't realize that an "album" was originally a binder with a half-dozen sleeves in it, each with a disk placed inside.
And they spun really, really fast, didn't they?