Re: the term Oldies
> use of the term for this era of music as a radio format was
> begun in the mid 80s-
> Oldies stations did not exist (other than a few scattered
> stations) before then.
Well, I guess the Miami market was ahead of the trend, because we
had one oldies station (WAXY-FM) from the mid 70s to the mid 90s
(with some adjustments) and two more oldies stations (WVCG and
WBSS) in the early 80s, before WMXJ went on the air in about '85.
> (and, If you're not hip enough to catch on to
> tongue-in-cheek figures of speech, PLEASE do not attempt to
> lecture me on reading comprehension).
I'm not hip enough to accept a suggestion that I'm on drugs as a tongue-in-cheek comment. I never claimed to be hip, nor would I. Your comment was offensive.
I may be a boomer but I'm enough of an old fogey to be insulted by a suggestion that I'm on crack.
If you can't keep in mind that on the web, you can't see who your audience is -- well, maybe YOU are on crack. I hope no one gives you a microphone. You may
consider it as a figure of speech, but I mean it as a character defect.
73s from 954!
<P ID="signature">______________
HURRICANE INFO ON SOUTH FLORIDA RADIO
Updated For 2005 Season
(including NOAA stations)</P>