There are a number of issues here that I would like to address. First, in regard to Ricky, I did a little research. I went through my copies of Radio and Records and found that they did a full page story on him when he was on KOMA, Oklahoma City. He must have had quite an audience with KOMA's 50000 watt signal on 1520. It covers about 22 states, a good deal of Canada and Mexico at night. I also found that about 50 major newspapers did stories on Ricky's show including the following: Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, Miami Herald, Tampa Tribune, Newark Star Ledger, Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Kansas Star, Fort Worth Star Telegram, San Diego Union Tribune and a bunch of others. He is no amateur. He seems to have no trouble getting publicity. He has gotten more positive publicity than any dj or oldies station including WCBS-FM. The next thing is whether you like him or hate him, he is addressing a need for personality radio, not to mention all of the 1955-1971 music that is gone forever from over-the-air radio. The fact that he has recreated WABC's audio chain and plays vintage commercials is also a nice touch. This is much more than that Mark Simone's weekend show on WABC does or will ever do. People complain about the lack of 50s and 60s music on the radio. Ricky's show is a place to get it. Quit complaining!!!!!!!!!!!!!! People complain about a lack of personality djs. Ricky seems to take personality radio pretty seriously. Quit complaining!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Both XM and Sirius are automated most of the time. Ricky's show is not run by a computer but, by a human being. Quit complaining!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Rather than complain, be happy that someone has addressed the needs of what is not
on the radio and support the show. One other thing, when you think about it, Ricky might have a very good thing going. Versus CBS Radio, XM or Sirius, who have very high overhead, Ricky's overhead must be pretty low. He can make a good deal of money without having to have millions of subscribers. While XM and Sirius may end up going out of business, merger or not, Ricky will still be around and obviously television and the press know it.