Don78 said:more syndication, automation and vting, yep the state of radio today bites.
roadrunner said:After having 13 years of three almost identical country FMs it's TIME one of them change their format. I know Nashville has often had three top-40 or rock stations, each a little different..but come on...we DON'T need THREE cornball country stations. Now WSM-FM will never change their format since they "beat out " the other two in the last arbitron report. I don't care if it's hot a/c, talk, alternative, a new a/c that plays songs that Mix 92-9 ..just something different than "nare-nare" ,boot-stompin' , hee-haw depressing country crap.
roadrunner said:just something different than "nare-nare" ,boot-stompin' , hee-haw depressing country crap.
TheBigA said:roadrunner said:just something different than "nare-nare" ,boot-stompin' , hee-haw depressing country crap.
That's the funniest post I've seen here in a while.
Hey! Wake up! You live in bloody NASHVILLE, buddy. You're lucky ALL the stations don't play that "nare nare" stuff. It's where they make it, for God's sake.
You probably go to Italy and complain that all the food has marinara sauce on it. Go to Detroit and complain about all those damned car companies stinkin' up the place.
You must be the same guy who can't understand why DC has so many news stations.
roadrunner said:So I'm not a big country fan. So what.
TheBigA said:Most people are shocked when you tell them there's other music there.
Bob E. Nelson said:There was a time decades ago when some of the leading families and the bluebloods resented the country image that Nashville acquired. They were proud of Vanderbilt, the Hermitage and the "Athens of the South" reputation but didn't much care for trappings of country music.
One isolated incident comes to mind when I was having a late Saturday lunch at the Cain-Sloan restaurant, overlooking the Ryman. The Opry crowd has already started forming on the streets below. A table nearly with several Brahmins looked out the window and haughtily (and loudly) pronounced: I do wish they would move that thing to Knoxville.![]()
That is stereotyping at its very worst. Besides, everyone knows that what gets played on "country" radio is not really "country" anymore. That probably explains why half of it crosses over to 92.9! :TheBigA said:You picked the wrong city to live in, dude. It's the friggin' country music capital of the world. You say the word "Nashville" to people anywhere in the world, and they think of "nare-nare," hee-haw, and boot stompin' crap. Most people are shocked when you tell them there's other music there.roadrunner said:So I'm not a big country fan. So what.
Ironically, the Opry eventually moved east, but not that far east, when they relocated to the Opry house in '74. Ironically, Cain-Sloan itself is no longer here. That location (downtown) is probably the one that was dynamited to make room for a parking lot a couple of years after I first moved here.Bob E. Nelson said:One isolated incident comes to mind when I was having a late Saturday lunch at the Cain-Sloan restaurant, overlooking the Ryman. The Opry crowd has already started forming on the streets below. A table nearly with several Brahmins looked out the window and haughtily (and loudly) pronounced: I do wish they would move that thing to Knoxville.![]()
firepoint525 said:That probably explains why half of it crosses over to 92.9! :![]()
TheBigA said:Then again, back in the 60s, you could hear Roger Miller, Johnny Cash, Buck Owens, Marty Robbins, and Merle Haggard on the pop stations.
jetfli said:LOL & Priceless, Bob. Every time I hear people wonder why there are more UT fans than Vandy fans at a UT-Vandy football game played in Nashville, I always remind them how much the Vanderbilt crowd is embarrassed over Nashville being County Music USA, and then explain that they look down their noses at football just as much as they do country music.