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Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message news:telamon_spamshield- Oh, now I would say a good portion of what he has posted here has been verified false made up BS. Nothing has been verified as same. I think that most of what you post is BS has been pretty obvious to all who have had the misfortune to read your posts. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... little kids to molest? that was a lot more exciting and productive than falling asleep from boredom in high school... and later I had the luxury of studying what I wanted, not a required curriculum, in college. Not a required curriculum...right. This is what lots of people say who failed to graduate, so I'm willing to bet that you didn't graduate. Did you? Nope, the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. Another fine story. You should be a Coast to Coast guest. On second though you have better work on making your story more believable. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Nope, the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. Crap.. you grew up with English, you frickin', lying little retard! I grew up in a multilingual home. My mother, who spent years in Europe, spoke several languages, and my grandmother, daughter of the US ambassador to Germany, spoke German to us so we would be exposed. By age 13 or 14, I was listening mostly to Latin American radio and music, and over the years had many years of French and 6 years of Latin. I was, in fact, in a multicultural environment. At about age 6, I enjoyed flying a Brazilian flag in front of the house because I had a vision of travelling the Amazon. BS us some more, Gleason! Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. 'Eduardo', you're full of ****! |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... What strikes me as bizarre about you... er, that should be "exceedingly bizarre" since nearly everything about you is somewhat bizarre... is your repeated focus on high school diplomas. One is obviously not needed if a person is intelligent and a bit of an autodidact. Since most classroom time is wasted while the slowest learners are attended to, most high school classes are boring and frustrating to those of some ability. Yet you seem to wish all teens to be doomed to this experience, which dulls the mind and stifles creativity... why is that? Because you're a verifiable pathological liar? You did not answer the question: what is so important about a high school diploma? Most people attain one so the fact that you could not makes you different and not in a good way. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Most people are bored with HS and still manage to get through it. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. You built nothing. He built up a story. It took a great deal of fabricating to make up that lie of a life story and now he has to maintain that lie. It's not getting any easier for him. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
Telamon wrote: In article , dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. You built nothing. He built up a story. It took a great deal of fabricating to make up that lie of a life story and now he has to maintain that lie. It's not getting any easier for him. No, it's not. dxAce Michigan USA Shanti Om |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Nope, the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. Crap.. you grew up with English, you frickin', lying little retard! I grew up in a multilingual home. My mother, who spent years in Europe, spoke several languages, and my grandmother, daughter of the US ambassador to Germany, spoke German to us so we would be exposed. By age 13 or 14, I was listening mostly to Latin American radio and music, and over the years had many years of French and 6 years of Latin. I was, in fact, in a multicultural environment. At about age 6, I enjoyed flying a Brazilian flag in front of the house because I had a vision of travelling the Amazon. BS us some more, Gleason! Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
Telamon wrote: In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Nope, the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. Crap.. you grew up with English, you frickin', lying little retard! I grew up in a multilingual home. My mother, who spent years in Europe, spoke several languages, and my grandmother, daughter of the US ambassador to Germany, spoke German to us so we would be exposed. By age 13 or 14, I was listening mostly to Latin American radio and music, and over the years had many years of French and 6 years of Latin. I was, in fact, in a multicultural environment. At about age 6, I enjoyed flying a Brazilian flag in front of the house because I had a vision of travelling the Amazon. BS us some more, Gleason! Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. Yeah, she tossed his lying butt, fer sure! dxAce Michigan USA Shanti Om |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: Sitting in a class waiting for the dolts to "get it" is very frustrating. In the end, it was not worth it. Better to "fake it", right? Better to do something useful. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... little kids to molest? that was a lot more exciting and productive than falling asleep from boredom in high school... and later I had the luxury of studying what I wanted, not a required curriculum, in college. Not a required curriculum...right. This is what lots of people say who failed to graduate, so I'm willing to bet that you didn't graduate. Did you? Nope, the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. Another fine story. You should be a Coast to Coast guest. On second though you have better work on making your story more believable. The course of study is undoubtedly in the ASU records from '73 to '75, while the position of VP is listed in the annual reports of Pueblo International, Inc. (NYSE: PII) for every year from 1975 to 1980. Next question? |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... What strikes me as bizarre about you... er, that should be "exceedingly bizarre" since nearly everything about you is somewhat bizarre... is your repeated focus on high school diplomas. One is obviously not needed if a person is intelligent and a bit of an autodidact. Since most classroom time is wasted while the slowest learners are attended to, most high school classes are boring and frustrating to those of some ability. Yet you seem to wish all teens to be doomed to this experience, which dulls the mind and stifles creativity... why is that? Because you're a verifiable pathological liar? You did not answer the question: what is so important about a high school diploma? Most people attain one so the fact that you could not makes you different and not in a good way. My point is that I have never been held back by not having one, and leaving high school when I did afforded me real world experience I never could have obtained in school or college, as well as contacts all around Latin America that have served me well for decades. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Most people are bored with HS and still manage to get through it. .... only because they had no alternative. I did. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
www.devilfinder.com Walt Grayson Mississippi John Hurt Museum
John Hurt went to New York City and sang a song about Avalon.Then he went back home and back to farming.Walt Grayson said there are people who come from all over the World to see the museum and touch the walls. Just like at Po Monkey's Juke Joint. devilfinder.com Po Monkey's Juke Joint www.juneberry78s.com Radio will never die. cuhulin |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. You built nothing. He built up a story. It took a great deal of fabricating to make up that lie of a life story and now he has to maintain that lie. It's not getting any easier for him. As mentioned before, my entire curriculum vitae can be verified. I can give you a hundred names, ranging from the mayor of Guayaquil to the leading DJ in Miami who worked for me, with me or were clients or such of my stations in Ecuador; my website actually has multiple pictures of me from the construction of the first station onward, as well as my cards, a verie letter from a prominent NRC member, etc. In fact, several NRC members, the US delegate of the AIR, etc., visited me and saw my stations... folks such as Larry Godwin and John Hoogerheide of the NRC and Arch Madsden of Bonneville International.. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. That is pretty funny. I had always wanted to live in Latin America going back to pre-school years. Since I was bored with school, despite very high grades, the school advisor recommended a year in another country. That year turned into an internship at Organización Radio Centro in México City (Check with Francisco Aguirre, Jr., CEO of GRC or Ramiro Garza Treviño, then PD of the group, both living and friends) and then another trip to Ecuador where I ended up buying a station license during my senior year of school and putting a station on the air (Check for Carlos Guarderas Barba, who now has an alarm company in Ecuador who sold me much of my technical parts and supplies, or Larry Cervone, retired former head of Gates Radio in IL who sold me the studio equipment of Betty Pino at WAMR in Miami who did free lance announcing for me from '65 to '67 or Herb Levin, former Manager of WQBA in Miami who helped me get work in PR whent he government went wild in Ecuador in 1970). My mother was very proud of my accomplishments. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On Mar 21, 10:27�pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"D Peter Maus" wrote in ... David Eduardo wrote: "D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... � Which raises the question....why would you waste your time? � You dismiss him as irrelevant. You dismiss him as alcoholic. � And yet...you're the one who engages him. If you had been on a high school or college debate team, you would understand. � � �So, this just sport for you. You're not arguing to purpose, you're simply arguing. Got it. No, you do not get it. Debate, going back to the Greeks, was as much about the enjoyment of the discussion as the content being discussed. There are two parts... holding a point of view and enjoying the challenge of defending it. I have a disdain for DXers who have a disdain for broadcasters. Big difference. � � �What you conveniently ignore, is that fans don't turn on the object of their fanaticism....they have to be run off. This "hatred" has to origins... One is based in the decline of AM whereby most "DX hours" programming is networked and there is little variety to hear among domestics. The second is based on AM looking for a saviour, and placing some faith inHD Radioto improve its declining fortunes. The first makes late-night DX boring. The second makes it impossible. Both are reasonable business decisions by AM stations, but DXers see them as attacks. � � �Broadcasters were long disdainful of DXers before DXers were turned off. I would not say that. Interest in DX reports waned as the importance of non-local coverage waned, while at the same time most non-Metro stations used outside contract engineers who were not paid to answer reception reports. Today, nearly nobody at a station will know what DX even is. Unless, like another poster here, who faded away about the time of your appearance, your bickering here is fodder for some discussions outside of the group. How nice to be able to foment conversation. � � �As usual, you miss my point. You have no point. "News/Talk/Sports:Radio's Last Bastion" "Music FMs of any flavor are utterly screwed... Right now -- while FMs are losing the music audience to new media -- satellite radio is offering more News/Talk/Sports programming than we can fit on AM radio..." http://ftp.media.radcity.net/ZMST/daily/IS031005.htm "Sean Hannity's warning for music-oriented Radio" "In five years when every car has an iPod connection and you can listen to anything you want, what is music radio going to do? Sean is dead right on this point. Within five years we'll see diminishing ratings on sound-alike music-oriented FM's. And radio will enter a new age of non-music programming. Not necessarily talk. But not particularly music... The AM radio style of political talk is only one facet of what will fast become a burgeoning trend towards non-music." http://www.hear2.com/2007/12/sean-hannitys-w.html "The Last Days of AM Radio?" "Sports, all-news and talk programming continue to draw large audiences to the AM band in most big cities..." http://blog.washingtonpost.com/rawfi..._am_radio.html "News/Talk/Sports Tops Radio Formats, Interep Analysis Reveals" "The latest share numbers place the News/Talk/Sports format at the top, pulling in an average of 17 percent of listenership among persons age 12-plus, based on Arbitron figures for total radio listening in 92 continuously measured metros. That share number is even higher than levels seen last spring, when the war in Iraq began. According to Interep, more stations than ever are programming News/Talk." http://www.thenewsletterplace.com/05...9/article4.htm It's the music-oriented FMs that are screwed. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. That is pretty funny. I had always wanted to live in Latin America going back to pre-school years. Since I was bored with school, despite very high grades, the school advisor recommended a year in another country. That year turned into an internship at Organización Radio Centro in México City (Check with Francisco Aguirre, Jr., CEO of GRC or Ramiro Garza Treviño, then PD of the group, both living and friends) and then another trip to Ecuador where I ended up buying a station license during my senior year of school and putting a station on the air (Check for Carlos Guarderas Barba, who now has an alarm company in Ecuador who sold me much of my technical parts and supplies, or Larry Cervone, retired former head of Gates Radio in IL who sold me the studio equipment of Betty Pino at WAMR in Miami who did free lance announcing for me from '65 to '67 or Herb Levin, former Manager of WQBA in Miami who helped me get work in PR whent he government went wild in Ecuador in 1970). My mother was very proud of my accomplishments. Uh-Huh |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Most people are bored with HS and still manage to get through it. ... only because they had no alternative. I did. Sure they do. It's called dropping out and getting a job or going in the service. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." So how did you do this? You are 16, no HS diploma that you could have gotten early but instead you quit. Who would lend money to a 16 year old loser to built a radio station? There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Well, that's water over the dam now. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Most people are bored with HS and still manage to get through it. ... only because they had no alternative. I did. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Funny. You've never owned a damn thing since you made up the South American stuff! |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. You built nothing. He built up a story. It took a great deal of fabricating to make up that lie of a life story and now he has to maintain that lie. It's not getting any easier for him. As mentioned before, my entire curriculum vitae can be verified. I can give you a hundred names, ranging from the mayor of Guayaquil to the leading DJ in Miami who worked for me, with me or were clients or such of my stations in Ecuador; my website actually has multiple pictures of me from the construction of the first station onward, as well as my cards, a verie letter from a prominent NRC member, etc. In fact, several NRC members, the US delegate of the AIR, etc., visited me and saw my stations... folks such as Larry Godwin and John Hoogerheide of the NRC and Arch Madsden of Bonneville International.. Yeah right. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. That is pretty funny. I had always wanted to live in Latin America going back to pre-school years. Since I was bored with school, despite very high grades, the school advisor recommended a year in another country. That year turned into an internship at Organización Radio Centro in México City (Check with Francisco Aguirre, Jr., CEO of GRC or Ramiro Garza Treviño, then PD of the group, both living and friends) and then another trip to Ecuador where I ended up buying a station license during my senior year of school and putting a station on the air (Check for Carlos Guarderas Barba, who now has an alarm company in Ecuador who sold me much of my technical parts and supplies, or Larry Cervone, retired former head of Gates Radio in IL who sold me the studio equipment of Betty Pino at WAMR in Miami who did free lance announcing for me from '65 to '67 or Herb Levin, former Manager of WQBA in Miami who helped me get work in PR whent he government went wild in Ecuador in 1970). My mother was very proud of my accomplishments. I'm sure what I wrote is closer to the mark. You do have a great imagination though. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... Sure they do. It's called dropping out and getting a job or going in the service. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." So how did you do this? You are 16, no HS diploma that you could have gotten early but instead you quit. Who would lend money to a 16 year old loser to built a radio station? I worked in radio since I was 13, but had an investment account since I was 9. My father had been an investment banker and taught me; while some kids got Lone Ranger masks and toy gunbelts, I got shares of stock and could trade them and add to them. I traded stuff on the Toronto Exchang, mostly, where $25 could buy 100 shares of Ajax Petroleum. At about 10, I got an "imperfect" Chandler & Price printing press from my Grandfather (who was president of the C&P) and sold business cards, letterheads, forms, QSL cards, etc. By the time I was 17, I had enough money to build a station and (barely) run it til it became profitable. There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Well, that's water over the dam now. And I was fortunate to have a family that understood that I could always go back to school, but never go back in time to seize a moment of opportunity. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
In article ,
dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message .. . In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Most people are bored with HS and still manage to get through it. ... only because they had no alternative. I did. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Funny. You've never owned a damn thing since you made up the South American stuff! This stupid Eduardo make believe stuff sure is boring. Next up Eduardo and solves global cooling by venting more hot air. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
Telamon wrote: In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... Not all people are monocultural xenophobes. You never explained what you did to have your mother throw you out of the house. Where threatening violence upon some family member? Doing drugs? Maybe it was cheating on those HS final exams and getting thrown out of HS that was finally the last straw for your mom. That is pretty funny. I had always wanted to live in Latin America going back to pre-school years. Since I was bored with school, despite very high grades, the school advisor recommended a year in another country. That year turned into an internship at Organización Radio Centro in México City (Check with Francisco Aguirre, Jr., CEO of GRC or Ramiro Garza Treviño, then PD of the group, both living and friends) and then another trip to Ecuador where I ended up buying a station license during my senior year of school and putting a station on the air (Check for Carlos Guarderas Barba, who now has an alarm company in Ecuador who sold me much of my technical parts and supplies, or Larry Cervone, retired former head of Gates Radio in IL who sold me the studio equipment of Betty Pino at WAMR in Miami who did free lance announcing for me from '65 to '67 or Herb Levin, former Manager of WQBA in Miami who helped me get work in PR whent he government went wild in Ecuador in 1970). My mother was very proud of my accomplishments. I'm sure what I wrote is closer to the mark. You do have a great imagination though. He's been known for that for better than 50 years! dxAce Michigan USA Shanti Om |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Funny. You've never owned a damn thing since you made up the South American stuff! In another post i gave a half dozen references to people who could 100% confirm my ownership of stations in Ecuador. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... Sure they do. It's called dropping out and getting a job or going in the service. It was a lot more challenging, rewarding and profitable to own and run a #1 radio station than to take woodshop or algebra. By being an owner, I could make mistakes that would cause an employee to be fired and learn how to fix them and not make them again. As John Kluge said to a friend of mine, "Son, you don't learn from your successes." So how did you do this? You are 16, no HS diploma that you could have gotten early but instead you quit. Who would lend money to a 16 year old loser to built a radio station? I worked in radio since I was 13, but had an investment account since I was 9. My father had been an investment banker and taught me; while some kids got Lone Ranger masks and toy gunbelts, I got shares of stock and could trade them and add to them. I traded stuff on the Toronto Exchang, mostly, where $25 could buy 100 shares of Ajax Petroleum. At about 10, I got an "imperfect" Chandler & Price printing press from my Grandfather (who was president of the C&P) and sold business cards, letterheads, forms, QSL cards, etc. By the time I was 17, I had enough money to build a station and (barely) run it til it became profitable. There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Well, that's water over the dam now. And I was fortunate to have a family that understood that I could always go back to school, but never go back in time to seize a moment of opportunity. They tossed your sorry ass... get over it 'Eduardo'! |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On 22 Mrz., 17:12, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message ... little kids to molest? that was a lot more exciting and productive than falling asleep from boredom in high school... and later I had the luxury of studying what I wanted, not a required curriculum, in college. Not a required curriculum...right. This is what lots of people say who failed to graduate, so I'm willing to bet that you didn't graduate. Did you? Nope, Yep. I had a feeling. the headhunter firm of Joe Sullivan, Inc. came calling and offered me a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... This is what lots of people say who failed to earn a college degree. what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. Then you DO have a degree? In what? From where? It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. You learned "business terminology". Congratulations. My neighbor just read the users manual for his new dishwasher. We're throwing him a party next weekend. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: There is no reason to be bored in HS if there is something else you can do that is of more value. Funny. You've never owned a damn thing since you made up the South American stuff! In another post i gave a half dozen references to people who could 100% confirm my ownership of stations in Ecuador. No paperwork. You owned nothing, retard boy. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On 22 Mrz., 17:13, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message ... You don't mean radio as a business. You mean radio as a scam. Were the radio business a scam, advertisers would not be coming back for over 85 years. Not if it only became a scam in the last few years. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On 22 Mrz., 17:14, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"dxAce" wrote in message ... What strikes me as bizarre about you... er, that should be "exceedingly bizarre" since nearly everything about you is somewhat bizarre... is your repeated focus on high school diplomas. One is obviously not needed if a person is intelligent and a bit of an autodidact. Since most classroom time is wasted while the slowest learners are attended to, most high school classes are boring and frustrating to those of some ability. Yet you seem to wish all teens to be doomed to this experience, which dulls the mind and stifles creativity... why is that? Because you're a verifiable pathological liar? You did not answer the question: what is so important about a high school diploma? It's the study and learning that earns the diploma that's important. If you ever earn one yourself, you'll understand that. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: As mentioned before, my entire curriculum vitae can be verified. I can give you a hundred names, ranging from the mayor of Guayaquil to the leading DJ in Miami who worked for me, with me or were clients or such of my stations in Ecuador; my website actually has multiple pictures of me from the construction of the first station onward, as well as my cards, a verie letter from a prominent NRC member, etc. In fact, several NRC members, the US delegate of the AIR, etc., visited me and saw my stations... folks such as Larry Godwin and John Hoogerheide of the NRC and Arch Madsden of Bonneville International.. Yeah right. Totally. Jaime Nebot Velasco, mayor of Guayaquil. My partner in Radio Carrousel 660. Betty Pino, 10 Am to 3 Pm WAMR Miami. Add to that: Herb Levin at WRHB Miami (former Manager, WQBA, Miami's #1 station, in the 60's and 70's) Carlos Guarderas Barba at Quito's leading security firm (http://www.cgbseguridad.com/quienes.php) Gabriel Espinoza de los Monteros, Canal Uno, Quito, Ecuador. Many NRC, NNRC, MWC, IRCA and NZDXA members got veries from me for tests I did "off frequency" on HCRM1 (565 instead of 570) on multiple occasions. Anyone who makes a phone call or two can find out. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: As mentioned before, my entire curriculum vitae can be verified. I can give you a hundred names, ranging from the mayor of Guayaquil to the leading DJ in Miami who worked for me, with me or were clients or such of my stations in Ecuador; my website actually has multiple pictures of me from the construction of the first station onward, as well as my cards, a verie letter from a prominent NRC member, etc. In fact, several NRC members, the US delegate of the AIR, etc., visited me and saw my stations... folks such as Larry Godwin and John Hoogerheide of the NRC and Arch Madsden of Bonneville International.. Yeah right. Totally. Jaime Nebot Velasco, mayor of Guayaquil. My partner in Radio Carrousel 660. Betty Pino, 10 Am to 3 Pm WAMR Miami. Add to that: Herb Levin at WRHB Miami (former Manager, WQBA, Miami's #1 station, in the 60's and 70's) Carlos Guarderas Barba at Quito's leading security firm (http://www.cgbseguridad.com/quienes.php) Gabriel Espinoza de los Monteros, Canal Uno, Quito, Ecuador. Many NRC, NNRC, MWC, IRCA and NZDXA members got veries from me for tests I did "off frequency" on HCRM1 (565 instead of 570) on multiple occasions. Anyone who makes a phone call or two can find out. 'Eduardo', many calls have been made. My phone bill was over $190.00 last month. You are a fraud... as in 'faux'... Got it, boy? |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On 22 Mrz., 17:17, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:13, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dxAce" wrote in message ... Broke, oh faux one? So very sad. You should have graduated high school. Graduating from high school would not have helped me at all and has never been a factor in business. It's all about successful work experience. This is what a lot of people say who failed to graduate from college. Wait a minute...you said high school? Are you serious? You failed to graduate from high school? That's not funny. Yeah, I was bored out of my gourd, and built a radio station instead. Boredom is never a sign of intelligence. Ever. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
"Telamon" wrote in message ... My mother was very proud of my accomplishments. I'm sure what I wrote is closer to the mark. You do have a great imagination though. Not really. She was always ahead of her times, including being the first woman board chairperson of the Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital system as well as a supporter of the NAACP in the 60's, on the board of the Visiting Nurse Association, the Cleveland Museum of Art, among many other activities in the community. She was so proud of the stations I created that, despite all her occupations my mother on a weekly basis visited a local one-stop and got all the new additions to the WIXY "Nifty Fifty" and sent them by registered mail to me in Ecuador. Since American music was a major part of the format at my first station, this was a key to success. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
dxAce wrote: David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: As mentioned before, my entire curriculum vitae can be verified. I can give you a hundred names, ranging from the mayor of Guayaquil to the leading DJ in Miami who worked for me, with me or were clients or such of my stations in Ecuador; my website actually has multiple pictures of me from the construction of the first station onward, as well as my cards, a verie letter from a prominent NRC member, etc. In fact, several NRC members, the US delegate of the AIR, etc., visited me and saw my stations... folks such as Larry Godwin and John Hoogerheide of the NRC and Arch Madsden of Bonneville International.. Yeah right. Totally. Jaime Nebot Velasco, mayor of Guayaquil. My partner in Radio Carrousel 660. Betty Pino, 10 Am to 3 Pm WAMR Miami. Add to that: Herb Levin at WRHB Miami (former Manager, WQBA, Miami's #1 station, in the 60's and 70's) Carlos Guarderas Barba at Quito's leading security firm (http://www.cgbseguridad.com/quienes.php) Gabriel Espinoza de los Monteros, Canal Uno, Quito, Ecuador. Many NRC, NNRC, MWC, IRCA and NZDXA members got veries from me for tests I did "off frequency" on HCRM1 (565 instead of 570) on multiple occasions. Anyone who makes a phone call or two can find out. 'Eduardo', many calls have been made. My phone bill was over $190.00 last month. You are a fraud... as in 'faux'... Got it, boy? And, if you don't belive that I make the calls, ask Mr. Bryant! He'll 'verie' that I indeed make the calls. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 17:12, "David Eduardo" wrote: a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... This is what lots of people say who failed to earn a college degree. Lots of them say they were recruited to be VP's of ´publicly traded companies? what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. Then you DO have a degree? In what? From where? No., I was never even working towards one. I had a lot of free time while consulting in the Southwest and decided to take courses that would be of benefit to me personally, not necesarily towards a degree. I've never even been asked about my educational background the few times I have changed jobs... for each one I was recruited rather than having applied. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. You learned "business terminology". Congratulations. My neighbor just read the users manual for his new dishwasher. We're throwing him a party next weekend. All my business terminology and knowledge was in Spanish. Since I was in the US, I thought it appropriate to learn the terms of the trade as well as the differences in legal aspects of business. That was most useful, in fact. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
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Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
On 22 Mrz., 17:19, "David Eduardo" wrote:
wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 16:16, "David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... No, I did not renew... a few ornery DXers who are against radio as a business made it annoying, particularly when one has to pay to be a member. They told you not to Renew. No, I got multiple e-mails from club officers and long term members asking me to continue. I'll bet they didn't know you flunked out of high school! As stated before, I quit because I started a business instead. School was so boring that it was easier to read the text books the first week of school, and then skip classes and only take the tests. You flunked out of school and then did the only natural thing: you went to work. If you'd really been a good student, other, poor students and even poor teachers could not have held you back. Your own inherent curiosity and intellectual vigor would have propelled you forward. Instead, you failed and went to work. And that is fine. You have no reason to feel ashamed; but your incessant breastbeating and your relentless search for approval betrays a deep sense of shame. |
Jim Cramer Why Radio is dead.
David Eduardo wrote: wrote in message ... On 22 Mrz., 17:12, "David Eduardo" wrote: a VP position at a publicly traded company to run their broadcast division. Since I had gone to college because I was consulting and had lots of free time, this was no loss as I didn't have need for a degree... This is what lots of people say who failed to earn a college degree. Lots of them say they were recruited to be VP's of ´publicly traded companies? what I wanted was to give some structure to my knowledge of business and finance (radio management) and the social sciences such as psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology (radio programming, in other words) and math and statistics (research and ratings)... which I achieved. Then you DO have a degree? In what? From where? No., I was never even working towards one. I had a lot of free time while consulting in the Southwest and decided to take courses that would be of benefit to me personally, not necesarily towards a degree. I've never even been asked about my educational background the few times I have changed jobs... for each one I was recruited rather than having applied. It also allowed me to learn business terminology in English, which I had little familiarity with. You learned "business terminology". Congratulations. My neighbor just read the users manual for his new dishwasher. We're throwing him a party next weekend. All my business terminology and knowledge was in Spanish. Hogwash! You are a fraud. |
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