Hello Librivox!
I haven't been on the forum very much recently, but I am still enjoying all of your fine work.
I download stuff all of the time to air on our little radio station here in Columbus, Mississippi
which is 100%, 24x7 audio books, 99.9% from librivox.
We recently passed our 5 year anniversary from the date we started this project.
It took a couple of years to get everything together and get on the air.
I take this opportunity to invite anyone to read a station identifcation for
our station and send it to me by email. It should be of the form:
This is <your name> in <your place>
and you are listening to Classic Book Radio
WMFH-LP, 95.5, Columbus, Mississippi.
If you don't want to give your name or location, you can leave that top line
off. But we like hearing all of the different voices and accents.
I think it adds to the station to know where various accents come from.
Record it into an mp3 as you would for your librivox readings
and email it to me : contact@wmfh-lp.org
If you would like to hear our station, we have a streaming link on
our website at http://wmfh-lp.org along with the daily schedule.
Chris Howard
Classic Book Radio
Columbus, Mississippi
p.s. I grew up listening to Doug Brown reading on The Book Club on WOI FM from Ames, Iowa.
Call for Radio identification
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- Posts: 44
- Joined: August 29th, 2018, 11:30 am
This sounds fun! I won't even suppress my natural accent for it like I usually do, haha.
Please give me feedback! I'm always trying to improve!
Matt Bounds
Matt Bounds
Count me in, Sounds like fun!
-Mari
-Mari
I just saw this after having been off the forums for a while. I sent a clip of myself reading the station identification, in case you still want it.
"Nobody but a lay-out man knows what a lay-out man's feelings is [sic]."
-- Mr. Tallboy in "Murder Must Advertise" by Dorothy Sayers
-- Mr. Tallboy in "Murder Must Advertise" by Dorothy Sayers
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- Posts: 25
- Joined: November 18th, 2018, 9:51 am
- Location: near Portland, Oregon, USA
- Contact:
Chris,
I admire your vision and all the work you've put into the radio station. That's quite an accomplishment.
In the eighties and nineties I was an announcer and deejay at West Coast commercial AM and FM radio stations from Portland to San Jose. If somebody had told me then there would be a 24-hour radio station broadcasting only free public domain audiobooks, and even the top-of-the-hour legal station ID's would be recorded independently by volunteers working at home, I'd have thought it was the funniest thing. Because it's so antithetical to the world I lived in, where everybody was getting paid for everything. (But not much in some cases.) But this was before open-source software and a lot of other things changed my thinking.
I am definitely sending you a station ID. Thanks for your service to your community and for extending the reach of the work we do at Librivox.
Peter
I admire your vision and all the work you've put into the radio station. That's quite an accomplishment.
In the eighties and nineties I was an announcer and deejay at West Coast commercial AM and FM radio stations from Portland to San Jose. If somebody had told me then there would be a 24-hour radio station broadcasting only free public domain audiobooks, and even the top-of-the-hour legal station ID's would be recorded independently by volunteers working at home, I'd have thought it was the funniest thing. Because it's so antithetical to the world I lived in, where everybody was getting paid for everything. (But not much in some cases.) But this was before open-source software and a lot of other things changed my thinking.
I am definitely sending you a station ID. Thanks for your service to your community and for extending the reach of the work we do at Librivox.
Peter
The Story of a Movie is a "making-of" featurette for your ears.