ddsparxx said:OK, allow me to put in 2 cents here...I once subscribe to XM before the merger. I cancelled the subscription when time is up, mostly because I don't like to subscribe to anything. The music choices were fine, listened to mostly the "Cafe" channel except which I thought was OK.
Like johnnyu said in last month's post, I will not pay to listen to radio.
nocomradio said:Funny thing: Around the Memorial Day weekend, Sirius XM decided to reactivate my radio for 10 days for free to try to get me to come back. I hadn't used it in 2 years, so I dug it out, hooked it up and figured I'd listen and see if anything is any better. It wasn't.
Most notably, the DJ on Deep Tracks went off on a political rant about how evil 1%ers are, and started sounding like some rabid talk show host. It went on for nearly his entire show, with a bunch of political and protest songs sprinkled in. I couldn't help but think how absolutely out of line this was as he worked for one of those evil corporations he was ranting about, so I unplugged the radio, dumped the whole unit, power supply and antenna in the trash can and they will never see me again. I knew I was finished with Sirius before, now I am absolutely CERTAIN I am finished with them for good. What a mess.
ChannelFlipper said:Ah, I see you've stumbled onto the Jim Ladd show. Jim is a legend in his own mind and there is no amount of collectivist clap-trap he won't regurgitate, since he is all about "sticking it to the man". As a long-time LA listener, I can tell you that when Jim sticks to just spinning the records, he can be an excellent DJ. But when his mind wanders off to the political commune, which is often, he is unlistenable. But don't worry, the end of his rants always come at some (missed) point, usually followed by a Doors record.
ai4i said:Adjusted for inflation, fuel costs much less than it did before you were born, whatever your age might be.KR4BD said:With gas so high, I am driving much less.
Do the math, with an annual inflation rate of about 5%, a dollar is worth about four pre-inflated ¢ents, and I don't remember ever paying 16¢/gallon.
I have been following AZJoe's comments for several years across several discussion boards and they are allways intelligent.AZJoe said:Many people on these boards are old terrestrial radio hacks (former & current employees/owners, etc)...
Its always been AM/FM to them and always will be...to each their own.
He beat me to getting XM by just a couple of months!
I remember minimum wage being $1.65/hour in the middle seventies, so it has always lagged behind inflation.unitron said:In 1968, one hour of federal minimum wage, $1.60 per hour, would buy 5 gallons of gasoline.
Mitch Brewer said:YOU WILL NOT PAY TO LISTEN TO RADIO. Cool, don't. I will not pay to watch TV. I prefer to listen to radio. And I will pay to listen to decent radio compared to what is OTA in my area.
nocomradio said:To the O.P:
I am not sure how long you have been a subscriber to XM, or Sirius/XM as it is now known and has been for a few years. If you'd been there in the beginning as I was, and enjoyed what XM was and where it was going, you may have a different and not so rosy view of the merger mess that gutted XM. I am also not sure if you've ever had the occasion to deal with any of their personnel with a problem or issue with your subscription. It can frustrate you to tears at best. I dumped them shortly after the merger because they really, and truly seemed to me to act as if the customer meant nothing to them whatsoever. And that after paying for their service.