• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

How will KGB respond?

Reality check part duex

> >
> > Reality check. Both services lose more money than they
> have
> > in income... for every dollar they take in, they spend
> > three.
> >
> Reality check. Old news.
> Tiny boost? Not at all. GM alone is adding 1.5 million
> radios in 2006.

Here's a reality check: The SEC warned both companies not to count new in-car radios as subscribers. This doesn't provide the companies with cash flow. Sirius has a history of keeping subscribers on the books long after they have churned.

Based on your writing, you won't read this, but rant on how the future is here and how radio is dead. That's fine, and you have made some good valid points ... So if you take anything from this, remember Pets.com, Furniture.com and others had the same grand plans. Google, Yahoo!, Amazon and others survived because they have that positive money jingle in their bank accounts.<P ID="signature">______________
+--
Chris
SDRadio.net</P>
 
Re: Wrong math, wrong figures.

> >
> Reality check. Old news. They have invested over the past
> few years to get off the ground and will be out of the red
> and into the black by next summer.

Not quite. A straight line projection shows XM could be profitable by 2008, and Sirius around 2009. This assumes the cost of acquistion of each customer stays the same. This assumption is dangerous since the low hanging fruit is taken, and it will require things like paying Howard stern a billion or two to get more interest. Further, we do not know the long range churn rate, although we know it is increasing.

> Every business takes it
> in the beginning to get going. Dont matter if your a
> satillite radio provider or a kiosk in a mall...you will be
> in the red before you see the black.

XM haas been operating with losses for a decade. Each time they pile them up, they dilute the equity of the existing shareholders by tossing out more stock. Not all businesses start with losses. I have started radio stations tha tmade money the first month.

> > It will be many years... 4 to 5... before either could
> > approach profitability. By then, we may have other
> broadband
> > services that are more attractive.
> >
> Whatelse can I say beyond you being wrong, because they
> expect to be making profit beginning about the summer of
> 2006. 2007 should be all profit for XM.

They lost $30,000,000 a month this year so far. They would need to add more than 4.5 million subscribers to cover this loss, or, in other words, double the subscriber base. They also need to stop counting the cars on deal lots as "installs."

> > For the moment, we have two very expensive services that
> > have fewer subscribers than the cume of New York's top 2
> or
> > 3 radio stations.
> >
> Expensive? Not at all. Im not rich, and I own both services.

The average American household has income of $42,000 a year. An expense of over $100 has to be considered heavily in the many homes that have even lower income. When you have kids, a mortgage, the power bill, food costs, etc., ther eis not always $100 sitting around.

> Definatley not expensive to the large amount of people in a
> market like SD where the average individual gross annual
> income is a gazillion times what these services cost!

The median income in SD is $43,000 and the per capita income is $19,00. Again, for most peopple, paying over $100 for something they may not perceive as 100% necessary is unlikely in most cases.

> The
> fact is the total amout of subscribers of both services is
> well over 8 million people which would make them as large as
> major top 5 markets. Larger than SD. If NYs top 2 or 3
> stations have a cume of 8 million, which I doubt, that is
> impressive.

The sum of the cume of NY's top 3 stations is greater than the number of subscribers of both services combined. That, in perspective, is 3 out of 13,500 terrestrial radio staitons in the US.

Oh, since most sattelite installs ar ein cars, remember that only about 30% of US radio listening is in the car. So, if the average person listens to radio about 20 hours a week, that means just 6.6 hours in the car. So the satellite radio listening would be the equivalent of not 8 million persons but 30% of that, or 2.4 million, about the population of Phoenix.

The fact is that a diary count will reveal just around a 0.3 share of listening for satellite in total in most markets. To even make the book, they need around 12,000,000 subscribers. And that is two years off.
>
> > Oh, holiday giving is a tiny boost for satellite. Most
> > satellite radios are preinstalled in new cars, not add
> ons.
> >
> Tiny boost? Not at all. GM alone is adding 1.5 million
> radios in 2006.

I said "holiday giving is just a tiny boost." Which is all it is.

> That is only one company, in one year. Ford
> expects to add 1 million sirius subscribers over the next 2
> years.

Not all will be activated, not all will stay activated after the trial period. Remeber, car manufacturers and dealers are incentivized to put the radio in. So, XM and Sirius give cash upfront and a part of each subscription to the dealer and the manufacturer. If you think they get the full subscription fee, you are wrong. They get a fraction of the first year, in fact.

GM will be lucky to sell those 1.5 million cars. GM has lost $3 billion so far this year. FOrd has only lost $1.5 billion.

> XM just inked a deal that will put millions of XM
> radios in their and Infinity autos over the next couple
> years.

Infiniti does not sell millions of cars. They do not even sell hundreds of thousands. The hot Infinity, the FX, has sold 60 thousand all year, and it does not come with a preinstall unless you pay $650 for it to be added. I know, I have one.

> Even Delphi has sold 2.6 million units to date. Throw
> in the Sprint deal, and some others on the way...it just
> gets uglier.

Gee, so they add 4,000,000 more subscribers in two years. They approach profitability. And they can only generate, maybe, a 0.5 total share of radio listening with this. Where is the danger for commercial radio?

The threats to commercial radio are not from XM and Sirius, whose technology may not even be vialble by the time they fianlly make any money. It comes from new forms of broadband.
>
> XM added 310,000 subscribers alone in the third quater, they
> currently have about 6 million subscribers. SIRIUS added
> about 210,000 bringing their total to about 2.5 million
> subscribers. Which actually makes SIRIUS satillite market
> alone the equal of San Diegos population. The two combine
> for 8.5 million subscribers which makes them the equivilant
> of #3 market in the US. Second to only NY and LA.

Not to quibble, but you ar emissing Chicago. And you have to discount the cars on lots, and no one knows the future churn. In any case, each listener counts about 0.3 of a regular radio listener.

> > Sure,it is real and appeals to a smaller segment of the
> > public. But it is not an imminent threat to the
> > profitability of terrestrial radio, and, in fact, may
> never
> > be.
> >
> Smaller segmet of the public? Millions of subscribers over
> the past few years isnt a small segment David.

It took XM 4 years to get to the current size... and at current growth, it will take them 2 to 3 years to achieve profitability if no cost increases happen and if there is not long term churn.

As a precentage of the US, this is a tiny number. As a percentage of a market, it is a tiny number. In LA, with just under 5% of US population, there are only about 280,000 receivers... less than the cume of the #32 radio station in the market.

> The current
> total of 8.5 million subscribers is not a small segment.
> Would you call Chicago a small market? AND This is somthing
> that is really just getting of the ground and gaining in
> popularity.

XM started marketing over 4 years ago. That is hardly "just getting started." They have lost over $1.5 billion dollars since then. $125 million this year, or about $20 for every subscriber they have.

> Yet they are already a top 3 market on their own
> with approxamitly 8.5 million subscribers. By next summer
> they will both combine to have over 10 Million Subscribers.
> By next years end there will be more satillite radio
> listeners then NY radio listeners.

Wrong. Satellite reaches, generally, only in one place. See my explanations above. Only 30% of US raido listening is in a car.

and the market size comparison is irrelevant. How much share can they et in each indvidual market? At present, not even enough to make the book.
>
> The future is here. High gross income citys with stale,
> recycled programming like San Diego have been marked for
> termination. Like I said, 5 years and your average San Diego
> radio listener will not even be able to identify JACK from
> 91X from AM. And it will be the companies and programmers
> that did it to themselves.

Satellite has less than 4% of the population subscribed. Radio has always had 5% non-users, and about 6% light users. This is where XM and Sirius are getting the listeners. It does not affect radio, and anyone who thinks this is the fture threat is going to be blindsided.
>
 
Right data, wrong conclusion.

Both David and Chris have made good points, so I just want to emphasize the major flaw in your logic.

> Smaller segmet of the public? Millions of subscribers over
> the past few years isnt a small segment David. The current
> total of 8.5 million subscribers is not a small segment.
> Would you call Chicago a small market? AND This is somthing
> that is really just getting of the ground and gaining in
> popularity. Yet they are already a top 3 market on their own
> with approxamitly 8.5 million subscribers. By next summer
> they will both combine to have over 10 Million Subscribers.
> By next years end there will be more satillite radio
> listeners then NY radio listeners.

The flaw in your logic is that those listeners are scattered across the entire country, not in a single radio market.

Combined, XM and Sirius do not have enough subscribers in any individual market to have any impact on the ratings. Further complicating your equation is that the relative handful of listeners in each market are fragmented across all of the channels offered. Therefore, no satellite "station" has enough audience per market to show in the ratings, and it would take an incredibly long time -- certainly not "by next year's end" (BTW, learn to use apostrophes) -- for any satellite "station" to have the impact that matters ... measurable audience.

Please take off your rose colored glasses and give yourself the reality check you were trying to give us. The reality is that, while your facts are correct, your interpretation of them (and therefore your conclusion) is terribly flawed.<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
Re: Right data, wrong conclusion.

>
> The flaw in your logic is that those listeners are scattered
> across the entire country, not in a single radio market.


Those listeners are 8.5 million and growng at a faster rate then any number market.


>
> Combined, XM and Sirius do not have enough subscribers in
> any individual market to have any impact on the ratings.
> Further complicating your equation is that the relative
> handful of listeners in each market are fragmented across
> all of the channels offered.


Therefore, no satellite
> "station" has enough audience per market to show in the
> ratings, and it would take an incredibly long time --
> certainly not "by next year's end" (BTW, learn to use
> apostrophes) -- for any satellite "station" to have the
> impact that matters ... measurable audience.


I never said they would make an impact by next years end. I said XM is supposed to be making profit, out of the red.Sorry you dont like my text messaging (intranet play www. dot bom, whatever) You know what they say when you cant win the argument attack grammer and spellin'. I do however believe in the next 5-10 years satillite will have cut into certain FM demos, not all, in some major markets, again, not all. But for a number of reasons, some of which I mentioned before.




>
> Please take off your rose colored glasses and give yourself
> the reality check you were trying to give us. The reality
> is that, while your facts are correct, your interpretation
> of them (and therefore your conclusion) is terribly flawed.
>



8.5 million and growing every day.Certian key demos in certian markets specifically being targeted. Your opinion on a messageboard doesnt change that. 5-10 years they will have cut significantly into certian San Diego demos and formats.
 
You are way off here...

Great arguement...unfortunatly I said 5-10 years on satillites effect on San Diego (and certian key demos in San Diego). But as of this week, yes you have some valid points. I only said that XM will begin showing profit this year, not making an appearence in the ratings. Yes Sirius will take a bit longer, but again that subscriber base grows everyday.

Again, not this year. 5-10 David.
 
The Reality is Satillite is knocking at your door...

> Based on your writing, you won't read this, but rant on how
> the future is here and how radio is dead.

Never said it is 'dead'...in trouble, certian audiences targeted, some changes should be made, ect..."marked for termination"...but not dead. Serious trouble if somthing isnt done not only with programming, but federal regulations (I personally think that radio is a public service and satillite should be forced to carry a certian amount local programming)



That's fine, and
> you have made some good valid points ... So if you take
> anything from this, remember Pets.com, Furniture.com and
> others had the same grand plans. Google, Yahoo!, Amazon and
> others survived because they have that positive money jingle
> in their bank accounts.


Sure Pets.com went belly up...but the www.com internet is still around. Maybe 'Ethel' becomes 'Alcohol' or 'Raw Dog' becomes 'Comedy Central Satillite Radio'...but Satillite radio is here, aint going anywhere and in the next 5-10 years, PDs in Certian formats in certian areas will find themselves in programming battles with XM stations. Not all, but some, and more then you might think at this time.

All Im saying is get ready. "Heads Up" Thats all.
 
Re: ? for Crusty Bob

> I pay $29.95 for
> > unlimited wireless broadband through my Treo 650. I slip
> > that phone/PDA into a cradle in my car and listen to
> > Internet radio while driving around town (and at home, I
> > just plug in stereo headphones and put the Treo in my
> > pocket).
>
> I've heard about the Treo... How do you listen/hear the
> output from the Internet stream you have accessed while you
> are driving? I mean does the sound play through your car
> stereo speakers, does it have a built in oscillator
> transmitting over the FM band that you can access that way,
> do you listen on headphones/earphones (not too desirable
> while driving). I'd really love to be able to listen to
> live Internet streams in my car.


The Treo can access any Shoutcast stream using the "Pocket Tunes" player. I have a Seidio cradle for the Treo. That is plugged into the cigarette lighter adapter to provide power for Treo and the tiny GPS receiver that's also plugged into the cradle. I have the cradle mounted on an air vent to the left of the steering wheel. I was able to discreetly run the power cable to the lighter adapter. I used the same path for the audio cable which has a standard miniplug at one end and a cassette adapter at the other. The cassette adapter is always in the radio/player, but I can push eject and the cassette adapter stays in player slot but I can listen to the radio. And, when I want to play the Treo through the car sound sytem I justtap the adapter and it pops into the player. I not only listen to Internet radio that way, I also use it for phone calls. I have cassette adapters in the past which were quite noisy, but the setup I have now is quiet.

The Seidio cradle has a jack for a microphone and the mike and the little GPS unit are clipped to the sunvisor and, again, the wiring is pretty well hidden. The cradle does have a built in speaker (with its own volume control) and the music is okay on that but mostly I use that speaker when I have the talking GPS operating (I use Tom Tom GPS on the Treo) and want to listen to the car radio. I can listen to the GPS and Internet radio at the same time and I can adjust volume levels independently to balance them so the GPS instructions don't blast too loud over the music.

I have created a webpage with links to my favorite Shoutcast stations. It has large easy-to-read type and I can scroll through the selections using the Treo's right and left arrow buttons. Pushing the center button selects a station.

One thing I have not done yet, but want to, is to put some podcasts on the Treo. Right now I have a 500MB SD card in it, but I'm going to get a 1GB card that will have room for some of my favorite mp3's plus a rotating selection of podcasts. I too used to record streaming radio onto CD's (using Audio Hijack on the Mac).



>
> Regarding XM or Sirius, I had an add on XM unit in my
> previous car and it was a pain to use and tune while still
> trying to focus on driving. Then the "Oldies" channels
> programming was too restricted to Decades .... the 50s
> Channel did play some titles from '60, '61, '62, and '63,
> but then played a few songs (50s) I never heard of. I like
> a variety/mix of 50s-60s-and early 70s songs similar to the
> last few months of KOOL 99.3's playlist. I HATE reverb and
> I heard that too much on the 60s Channel, I HATED Terry
> "Motormouth" Young, then I remembered why I never liked
> Bruce Morrow and B Mitchel Reid (when he was on WMCA). XM
> only had 2 AAA-type channels that were too tame... Ahh XM
> just wasn't worth it and I find a lot of what I like on
> Internet radio stations such as RadioParadise.com and
> WOXY.com. I will gladly pay a little extra to be able to
> hear these stations as well as WRLL Real Oldies 1690 in my
> car. Terrestrial music radio offers little to me, I do
> listen to talk radio and sports talk radio. In the meantime
> here is what I do: I record streams of Internet radio I
> like at 75 minute intervals on my 'Replay Radio' software
> and then burn this programming onto 80 minute CDs which I
> listen to in my new car which has a 6 CD changer. Get the
> CDs at Costco in bulk, so they cost about 20 cents each.
>
 
Re: Crusty Bob

Thanks, Bob.... sounds like for all this to work, a vehicle must be equipped with a cassette player, right?? If so, my new car has a CD changer as I've noted but no cassette player. I could have one installed though as there's a place for it in my '04 turbo Miata. The '06 redsigned model Miatas (oficially known as the MX-5) cannot even accomodate a cassette player, which it seems half the new models out there don't even have a cassette player as an option anymore.
 
Re: You are way off here...

> Great arguement...unfortunatly I said 5-10 years on
> satillites effect on San Diego (and certian key demos in San
> Diego). But as of this week, yes you have some valid points.
> I only said that XM will begin showing profit this year, not
> making an appearence in the ratings.

XM is several years from profitability. They will lose over $250 million this year... and doing straight line tracking, assuming no increase in programming cost and full insurance coverage on the failing satellites, profits are in the 2008 to 2009 range.

> Yes Sirius will take a
> bit longer, but again that subscriber base grows everyday.
>
> Again, not this year. 5-10 David.

By then, high speed portable broadband willmake satellite irrelevant, and open in home and at wor to much greater penetration than satellite can garner.
>
 
Re: Crusty Bob

> Thanks, Bob.... sounds like for all this to work, a vehicle
> must be equipped with a cassette player, right?? If so, my
> new car has a CD changer as I've noted but no cassette
> player. I could have one installed though as there's a
> place for it in my '04 turbo Miata. The '06 redsigned model
> Miatas (oficially known as the MX-5) cannot even accomodate
> a cassette player, which it seems half the new models out
> there don't even have a cassette player as an option
> anymore.
>
Well you could use one of the many RF adapters which play the sound through your FM radio. I used those a lot with my iPod.
 
Re: Right data, wrong conclusion.

> > The flaw in your logic is that those listeners are
> scattered
> > across the entire country, not in a single radio market.
>
>
> Those listeners are 8.5 million and growng at a faster rate
> then any number market.

You missed the point, although you did quote the paragraph that explains what I meant:

> > Combined, XM and Sirius do not have enough subscribers in
> > any individual market to have any impact on the ratings.
> > Further complicating your equation is that the relative
> > handful of listeners in each market are fragmented across
> > all of the channels offered.

But you ignored the finer points as well:

> 8.5 million and growing every day.Certian key demos in
> certian markets specifically being targeted. Your opinion on
> a messageboard doesnt change that. 5-10 years they will have
> cut significantly into certian San Diego demos and formats.

See, you're still missing the point. There aren't going to be enough of that 8.5 million and growing in the San Diego market -- or any market -- to have an impact on the ratings.

And it is interesting that, once the original argument that XM snd Sirius would make an impact within a couple of years is disproven, now you say "eight to ten years". No terrestrial broadcaster would pour money into something that long waiting for ratings; why should the satellite broadcasters?

Your opinion on a message board doesn't change anything, either. Incorrect conclusions are still incorrect conclusions. No one in the industry who is knowledgeable on the subject is going to agree with you.

How about you go listen to your precious satellite radio and leave us alone. You're wasting database space.<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
Re: The Reality is Satillite is knocking at your door...

> Sure Pets.com went belly up...but the www.com internet is
> still around. Maybe 'Ethel' becomes 'Alcohol' or 'Raw Dog'
> becomes 'Comedy Central Satillite Radio'...but Satillite
> radio is here, aint going anywhere and in the next 5-10
> years, PDs in Certian formats in certian areas will find
> themselves in programming battles with XM stations. Not all,
> but some, and more then you might think at this time.
>
> All Im saying is get ready. "Heads Up" Thats all.

God, you are so clueless.

There will be no "programming battles" because there will never be enough satellite listeners in any one market listening to any one channel to make any kind of impact on the ratings. Not in five years, not in seven years, probably not even in ten years.

What part of that do you not understand?
<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
Re: The Reality is Satillite is knocking at your door...

>
> God, you are so clueless.
>
> There will be no "programming battles" because there will
> never be enough satellite listeners in any one market
> listening to any one channel to make any kind of impact on
> the ratings. Not in five years, not in seven years,
> probably not even in ten years.
>
> What part of that do you not understand?
>


Jesus frickin' Christ on a cracker. Coming from you I would expect that reply KM. Exactly...dont take satillite, the 10-12 million listeners it will have by spring and its growth rate over the past few years seriously. Guys like you are the best thing for satillite radio programmers. They could only hope every PD is as small minded as you.


Like I said. You and your opinion and assesment on a messageboard will not change the future.

Talk to me in 5-10.


Which part of that do you not understand?


God I hope your show isn't as played out and boring as your messageboard thingy you got going on here. Holy moley. Amen. Praise be to allah.
 
If you havent got a penny, a hay penny will do...

> And it is interesting that, once the original argument that
> XM snd Sirius would make an impact within a couple of years
> is disproven, now you say "eight to ten years".


Never said a couple years. Never said 8-10 years. Said 5-10. Get it straight.


5-10


Only thing that will 'disprove' my arguement is is time, 5-10. Not some messageboard moderator with a god complex. Nice try though.

You need change for your two cents buddy?
 
Re: If you havent got a penny, a ha'penny will do...

> > And it is interesting that, once the original argument
> that
> > XM snd Sirius would make an impact within a couple of
> years
> > is disproven, now you say "eight to ten years".
>
>
> Never said a couple years. Never said 8-10 years. Said 5-10.
> Get it straight.

In 5 years, satellite will very possibly be obsolete with the developments in broadband and hand held multifunciton devices.

There are no pennys made of hay, either.
 
Re: If you havent got a penny, a hay penny will do...

> > And it is interesting that, once the original argument
> that
> > XM snd Sirius would make an impact within a couple of
> years
> > is disproven, now you say "eight to ten years".
>
>
> Never said a couple years. Never said 8-10 years. Said 5-10.
> Get it straight.

You do realize, of course, that you have now made your claim more ludicrous by stating that it could happen in as little as five years.

Won't happen that soon. If it takes as long as ten years, XM and Sirius will either be heavily debt-laden to stay afloat or operating on a new business model.

I stand by my original explanation about why satellite is no threat to terrestrial radio. There will never be enough subscribers in any one market listening to the same channel at the same time to even get a .1 rating.

Satellite radio is going to have to achieve a much higher subscriber count -- say, 40-50% of the nation's population -- before you see the first satellite channel in the ratings.

<u>Nothing</u> that is unrated will ever impact advertising dollars. And that is why terrestrial radio is not "doomed".

Continue to rebut my arguments at the risk of proving yourself clueless to the people on this board. You're not, I note, getting a lot of support for your position, nor has anyone posted proof that my statements are wrong.

But, OTOH, you can't even quote the lyric of a Peter, Paul and Mary Christmas carol right ...<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
Dorothy, Lion, Scarecrow and the Tin Man.

> Continue to rebut my arguments at the risk of proving
> yourself clueless to the people on this board. You're not,
> I note, getting a lot of support for your position, nor has
> anyone posted proof that my statements are wrong.

First of Sherlock, Im not looking for support here. Unlike you, I dont need a messageboard to impress others. I have friends outside the internet in the real world. And lets be honest, only you and david have really argued my points. Maybe chris and that crusty clown guy talking about his treo and blues from Finlandia too. So congratulations, you have 4 people that support your point of view. 4 people..out of a market that has how many people? Out of how many hits on this messageboard? How come you only get about 150 or so people checking each topic? In a market of 2+ million, where hundreds of people work in radio, why isnt there more people interested in the knowledge displayed here by such wonderkind radio gurus like yourself?

Aha! Somewhere in there lies the answer.



>
> But, OTOH, you can't even quote the lyric of a Peter, Paul
> and Mary Christmas carol right ...
>


Im not 60. Only P/P&M I ever listened to was maybe Xmas music. I actually remember somthing similar those lyrics from a play or musical when I was a junior. My grandmother used to sing it to me. Jesus Mary and Joseph old man.

5-10 and the first of the stations to find themselves staring directly down the barrel of Satillite programming will be in the San Diego market.

What is the arguement? Lets see what time has in store.
 
Re: Dorothy, Lion, Scarecrow and the Tin Man.

> First of Sherlock, Im not looking for support here. Unlike
> you, I dont need a messageboard to impress others. I have
> friends outside the internet in the real world. And lets be
> honest, only you and david have really argued my points.
> Maybe chris and that crusty clown guy talking about his treo
> and blues from Finlandia too. So congratulations, you have 4
> people that support your point of view. 4 people..out of a
> market that has how many people? Out of how many hits on
> this messageboard? How come you only get about 150 or so
> people checking each topic? In a market of 2+ million, where
> hundreds of people work in radio, why isnt there more people
> interested in the knowledge displayed here by such
> wonderkind radio gurus like yourself?

Anyone who has to resort to this kind of a reply doesn't deserve any further response.

Go listen to your precious satellite radio and leave us alone.<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
Old English Money System. WORD Gubb-nah.

> In 5 years, satellite will very possibly be obsolete with
> the developments in broadband and hand held multifunciton
> devices.
>
> There are no pennys made of hay, either.
>



But then broadband and hand held multifunction devices will have no effect on terrestrial radio? Oh, you didnt say that. Interesting thought though.

Spoken like a man who has some type of financial interest in terrestrial radio David.

Speaking of financial intrest, Two farthing make a ha' penny. Pronounced 'hay penny'. Two ha' pennys made one penny.

Whew...I hope you dont balance anybodys books or work with finances Dave. Might find yourself getting took for a thrupence.

Stay away from wooden nickels.
 
Re: Dorothy, Lion, Scarecrow and the Tin Man.

> Go listen to your precious satellite radio and leave us
> alone.
>



Awww...Im sorry. I will listen to my satillite radio. Both of em, XM and Sirius, in home and the car. FM and AM too of course. Even some shortwave on a grundig. Got 2 CBs too. Used to dig watching my uncle and his Ham radio equiptment. Listen to radio on-line as well. Im just an audio fiend I guess.

Don't listen to it on my treo though. In fact Ive tired of my treo altogether. Dumped the Ipaq too. Damn thing never stopped ringing and texting and texting and ringing, and on and on and on...
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom