>>80 year old owner
I don't know exactly how old Larry Justice is but I read he started at WPGC in Feb of 1962--the same month and year I was born.And I'm 58.So if Larry was maybe 22 then he'd be about 80 now himself...yet he sounds a lot younger!
I don't know exactly how old Larry Justice is but I read he started at WPGC in Feb of 1962--the same month and year I was born.And I'm 58.So if Larry was maybe 22 then he'd be about 80 now himself...yet he sounds a lot younger!.
Can' t Find the Time To Tell You was big in New England but maybe about #86 nationally. A version by Rose Colored Glass did a bit better nationwide.The song was covered by Hootie and the Blowfish and that one appeared in the film Me Myself and Irene from the Farrelly brothers...filmed in various New England spots.
Another regional hit featured in a film was Lake Shore Drive by Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, in Guardians of the Galaxy. Big in Chicago; the not so subtle line about "cruising on down on
L.S.D." may have shied stations away from it.
A dedicated URL for WMEX could be set up in
minutes and cost maybe $15 a year.Even if
1510wmex or wmex1510 aren't available they could do some variation like 1510wmexgreatesthits or whatever. Their streaming does work well and images of album covers etc pop up along with it. TuneIn or
OnlineRadioBox don't have WMEX's stream;
TuneIn had "WMEX 1510/Morning Meeting"
listed (that was a show WMEX ran in the
Daly XL days..via Boston Herald Radio) but the audio was the Renegade Radio guys with a current
discussion of the virus etc
>>80 year old owner
I don't know exactly how old Larry Justice is but I read he started at WPGC in Feb of 1962--the same month and year I was born.And I'm 58.So if Larry was maybe 22 then he'd be about 80 now himself...yet he sounds a lot younger! I saw something online about how he owned about 5 stations.Think WCIB on the Cape was one.
Barefoot Larry Justice had a "lock myself in the studio" stunt back then.Mike Adams did the same thing at WEEI later.
The station is getting more attention on this message board and in facebook groups from radio geeks than i think actually regular listeners who arent radio people.
Ed Perry is free to spend his money as he sees fit, if he wants to buy stations and play the sounds of whales humping that is his business.
JFC!!!!
Ed Perry is free to spend his money as he sees fit, if he wants to buy stations and play the sounds of whales humping that is his business.
In this world of big corporations swallowing up radio stations, or buying them to take them dark or downgrade the signal so they can modify licenses in other markets, why sh*t on Ed Perry?
I know a fair amount of people that work or worked on Enterprise Drive, and there isn't one of them that does not sing high praises of Ed Perry.
I scratch my head at some of the things he has done. like buying a station that serves Brockton, but it is his vision, his risk, and his capital.
Everyone else on the planet wrote off 1510 in this market, it couldn't be done, too many obstacles, music on AM is dead, tower issues, you name it... not only did he get 1510 back on, but there is a translator approved for it and that will be Ed's next project if I had to take a guess.
Having an FM translator with a decent signal in and around Boston plus the WMEX designation online on tune-in for more effective streaming (rather than the talk format that is there now) would be nice.
I think Mr. Perry should be complimented for doing something for qualitative reasons since he apparently can afford it.
Currently 1510wmex dot com redirects to their old website (copyright 2017). Whether Perry can get that domain or set up another, who knows.
GoDaddy is the domain name provider.
The "qualitative" thing is arguable. What some call variety others might see as a trainwreck. He believes there are enough people who share his taste to make it worthwhile.
I've said this about other formats such as active rock or alternative. I'm sure there are enough people in Boston that if they pooled their money they could buy a radio station. The catch would be actually running it. (and not causing a divorce).
How many radio stations these days can you say that about?
In Boston there actually are quite a few. WMUB is pretty unique at what it does and how they do it. I happen to be a fan of WHRB, and I salute the alumni for what they do. There are a lot of very dedicated radio people in Boston. One of my favorite markets.
In Boston there actually are quite a few. WMUB is pretty unique at what it does and how they do it. I happen to be a fan of WHRB, and I salute the alumni for what they do. There are a lot of very dedicated radio people in Boston. One of my favorite markets.
You are correct. I should have qualified what I said to exclude those and other college stations along with brokered ethnic stations which do have unique and interesting programs for niche listeners.