Didn't say it was weird Stewart. I said I was trying to understand the phenomenon. Which you've helped. I used to like the radio too. I live in NYC. If there is a radio station here I should be listening to, I'd love to know it. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Stewart Mason" > Or maybe -- and I realize that this is a stretch -- we just happen to LIKE > LISTENING TO THE RADIO. > > I don't actually know where you live, Josh, but there are still cities out > there that have good-to-great radio stations. Boston is one of them, and > not even solely due to college stations like WMBR (where, incidentally, my > wife and I are going to be guest-hosting an hour of Breakfast of Champions > this Friday between 8:30 and 9:30 a.m.) and WERS. WFNX has within the last > year reinvented itself as a proper "alternative" radio station, dumping the > Limp Creed of Mudd in favor of a playlist that's about half college radio > oldies and half current stuff ranging from the Polyphonic Spree to the D4 > to the Shins to several of the Saddle Creek bands. The River is that > rarity, a AAA station that's not just All Sheryl Crow All The Time. > There's even a half-decent oldies station, and best of all, WGBH plays jazz > -- by which I mean proper jazz, not Kenny G and Wynton Marsalis -- every > night from 7 p.m. until Morning Edition starts at 5 a.m. > > So yeah. I've always got a stack of CDs to get through, both for work and > for pleasure. There's about half a dozen CD players in the house and car, > and I'm rarely without my iPod. And I still listen to the radio at least > six or seven hours a week, even more if you count NPR. > > Now why is that so weird? > > S > > >