Howard Stern Sirius Radio Show: It's worth the money?
At the time I'm writing this article, has been a year or so since the king of all media Howard Stern said goodbye to terrestrial radio and Sirius Satellite Radio gave enough of a jump on users to justify their $ 500,000,000 price. As expected, not all your old fans have made the jump, but with over 4 million subscribers and growing, Sirius has made a complete reversal of its rival XM, Sirius was punishing to Stern bought a radio arrival.I Sirius for music as a musician, I travel a lot, and great as are the iPods, I like listening to music you have not heard before and satellite radio seemed like a great vessel for that. Stern played a role, not because I was a fan (I was not) but because he knew that his influence is going to shoot for the Sirius side, and a new radio, XM expensive can not be a great idea for investment. one time I did not even listen to Howard, his program was not entertaining in terrestrial radio, and the added draw of the bad language was not exactly my drawing for showOne, however, was driving alone and I was bored. It was late. I listen to talk radio when I wake up late, and while I was scanning past some of the chat channels, I saw Howard 100, repeated show that day. I thought, what the hell? Minutes.Since I would give a few then I heard the daily schedule, sometimes for over four hours everything. I can not get enough of him. It is the best radio I've heard.Whether is Artie Lange talks about his addiction to heroin, an elderly woman talking about her sexual gratification at the age of 83, or a Wack Packer angrily flipping to over a few dollars is all great, and all uncensored.Under the scrutiny of the FCC, had the flawed bits, dull, safe, and Stern endless complaints about the system to knock it down is old, especially in large commercial breaks still plaguing free radio. The satellite, however, is like going out with friends, where there was stoic product plugs and repeated warnings that now is the convenience and fun "keep clean for the radio!". Yes, it's dirty, "the first in line, an act that takes place involving a glass eye that does not even want to describe the associated content, but Howard, Robin, Artie, and everyone else is saying what they want to say when they mean, and that is the difference.There are six minutes of ads per hour, so there's a flow to the show for once, and the best part of Stern's out there, is honored, organic and free. Censorship has never worked for Stern, his critics claimed that the lack of FCC satellite radio would give anything to rail against, and the show would be affected, but Howard Stern is not about rebellion, it's fart and sex jokes when you're trying to get to work in the morning. This is a line, angry dwarves, porn stars, and dysfunctional relationships that we can all laugh. It's entertainment, nothing too deep or serious, and the lack of censorship makes it shine. It was as if the old show was the soprano as shown by TBS, and the new show is HBO's version as we are all used. If you have not heard Stern, uncensored, you do not know what time missing.The only turn the show off? Once a week when repeated episodes of old terrestrial radio. The show took the world a decade ago, is better than ever, and far beyond its old self in its new form.
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