A man who said he was upset with a Wichita, Kan., radio station's programming crashed his 1987
Two Plymouths--not the automobiles, but the towns--got together over the Atlantic Ocean for a little chat via a satellite radio hookup Tuesday.
Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion" radio show, which ends June 13.
The Federal Communications Commission review board, in a rare move Thursday, recommended that a Fredonia, N.Y., radio station's license be revoked.
Two disc jockeys have taken Columbia, S.C., officials to task for putting up hundreds of banners welcoming evangelist Billy Graham to town for an eight-day crusade, beginning Saturday.
Moscow should stop jamming Western radio broadcasts to the Soviet Union, a Soviet commentator said Thursday in the government newspaper Izvestia.
Firesign Theatre, the counterculture radio ensemble that rose to prominence in the 1960s, will reunite for a special broadcast in October.
Francisco radio station KGO by black talk-show host Noah Griffin.
Hell hath no fury like a fan disappointed, as Mickey Rooney found out--forcefully--when he sat in for KABC radio's Michael Jackson on Wednesday morning.
You can't always get what you want . . . but Belleville, Ill., disc jockey Angela Gabriel tried for some time--about 2 1/2 hours.
The Louisiana Hayride, the live radio broadcast showcase that helped launch the careers of country
Randy Miller, a KSDO-FM in San Diego disc jockey who asked listeners to call him with jokes about the Chinese, is being called racist by some listeners.
A Waterbury, Conn., radio talk show host says he had a frequent caller arrested because "4 1/2
The Federal Communications Commission has warned a New York radio station against broadcasting its
Brown University sophomore Amy Carter faces possible suspension from the school for protesting apartheid at a demonstration, but thanks to two Boston dee-jays, she'll be able to drive off campus.
Radio celebrities Gary Owens and Al Lohman will be together again for the first time beginning June 1 when KFI-AM (640) launches "L.A.'
The release of the "Beverly Hills Cop II" sound-track LP is causing a problem for radio program
The Federal Communications Commission, in an effort to expand local radio programming for rural
David Perry, Jim Ladd and Jack Snyder--three former disc jockeys for the defunct rock station KMET--have filed suits in Los Angeles Superior Court against the station's owners and operators, claiming they were induced to sign employment contracts by station officials who knew at the time they would be fired.
Even though they've never heard of an Arbitron, Africans from Dakar to Dar es Salaam are listening to their radios as never before--there are now more than 42 million radios among Black Africa's 392 million people.