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Episode: 1199
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Title: HPR1199: Old Time Radio on the web
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1199/hpr1199.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 21:30:23
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---
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Hello, this is Frank Bell, and today I want to talk about one of my favorite things.
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And that is old time radio, which is commonly abbreviated OTR amongst his fans.
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What exactly is old time radio?
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Here's an excellent definition, and actually it's not really that old time.
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And I think of old time, I think of course carts and steam locomotives, and this was in
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the days of steam locomotives, but long past the days of course carts.
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Here's an excellent definition from the OTRFans.com website.
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The link will be in the show note to all the websites, shows and personalities that I mentioned
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in this broadcast.
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Old time radio, often called OTR, refers to radio shows from the early days of radio broadcasting.
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The term usually applies to dramas, comedies, mystery shows, westerns and variety shows that
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were acted out by professional actors and sent out over the airwaves.
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In the golden age of radio, families would sit around on their radio, listening to the
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exciting shows, the way we sit around our television sets, watching them today.
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The window of available old time radio shows is actually very small.
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Most of them date from the 40s and the early 50s.
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There are occasionally a few you might find from the 30s, but because of the limitations
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of recording technology, many of the early shows were not recorded.
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If they were recorded, the recordings were kept only a very short time.
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Much like the prints of many of the early Hollywood movies, which have since disappeared.
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In the 40s, recording technology began to improve first with the ability of recording
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to disk in a way that was actually listenable.
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If you've ever heard a song recorded in the 1920s, you know how low the fidelity was
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and how really bad the sound quality was.
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But with the coming of advances in recording to disk and then with magnetic tape, more
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of these shows got recorded and stored, either by listeners or by the studios themselves.
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I actually remember listening to radio when it was a medium of entertainment.
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Now I was not of the generation of Ralphie in the movie The Christmas Story.
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If you remember the scene where he ran home to listen to Little Orphananny after school.
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By the time I was allowed to stay up past 7th or 30th or so, the evening entertainment
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side of radio had pretty much disappeared, although there were a few holdouts.
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I don't remember my family sitting up and listening to the radio, like Little Ralphie's
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family did.
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I do remember, however, listening to entertainment radio in the daytime.
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I remember the author Godfrey Show, which was an hour long variety show on CBS.
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It was followed by the Gary Moore Show, another variety show.
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Then there were a couple of soap operas, one of which was the radio version of a guiding
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light, the other of which I can't remember the name.
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And they were followed by a 20 minute song and pattern show by Rosemary Clooney and Ben
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Crosby, in which they sang several songs and talked to back and forth.
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I learned recently the shows were actually recorded much in advance.
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They record the voice and the pattern, and then the studio would interpolate the songs.
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But it was fairly entertaining for the time.
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Later on, I listened to regularly to a show from KYW when it was in Cleveland before it
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moved to Philadelphia.
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I caught it on the skip since I grew up approximately 800 miles from Cleveland, but in the evening
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we had good skip, the raised bouncing off the ionosphere for those who don't know
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what the skip is.
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And Harp Morgan had a kind of odd ball, a news magazine, I guess it would be called,
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these days going towards more offbeat subject.
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And particularly every, I think it was Tuesday nights, he had a euphologist on his show.
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A euphologist being someone who studied UFOs.
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I just went back in the late 50s, early 60s, when people were convinced that not only
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is their life on other planets, which is highly likely, but that they were interested
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in us, which is highly unlikely.
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And later on, I stumbled over Gene Shepard, who had an early evening show on WR in New
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York.
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If the atmospheric conditions were just right, I could listen to Gene Shepard.
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In fact, the first one I recall listening was one in which he read a short story about
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the Red Rider BB gun, which is one of the three or four stories which were aggregated
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together to make that movie I mentioned earlier, The Christmas Story, about Ralphie and the
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Red Rider BB gun.
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And Gene Shepard was just delightful, a witty, funny and creative man delightful to listen
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to.
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So Radio has been a part of my entertainment for a long time, and I'm lucky enough to
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remember it when it consisted of more than crackpot political theorists spewing hate,
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giant corporations replaying playlist of very bad music or sports talkers talking about
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players, sports and leagues, that no one cares about except the sports talkers and the
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people they can gen up some kind of interest in.
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About the only place on the radio dial, no, actually commercial radio as an entertainment
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medium, as far as I am concerned, is dead.
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Like news, information and entertainment you can find on the radio, you will find
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at your local public station where there is still some creativity and some element of
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good sense.
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Old time radio though is a rich source of entertainment and information.
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You can find contemporaneous newscast of World War II, for example, not that I listen
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to those, and the adventures and dramas cowboy shows, detective stories, mysteries.
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I'm a mystery buff, so my taste leans toward listening to old mysteries.
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Not suspense, I have enough suspense in my real life, but mysteries.
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My ideal mystery is the one that opens at the beginning with the body in the library
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already dead and closes with the great detective revealing who done it on the last page.
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After 200 pages of red herrings, distractions, false clues and general who shot John.
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I will have to say that what I'm going to say is going to be very much from a US perspective
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because the US is where I am, specifically Southeastern Virginia.
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There may well be similar resources to the ones that I'm talking about in other countries.
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I do have one I'm going to mention from Canada, but I have to, I'm limited somewhat by the
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blinders that I have.
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One other thing I want to say is that for anyone who has an interest in culture and
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sociology and cultural change, listening to old time radio, it's a fascinating window
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into the times in which it was made.
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The portrayal of women is interesting.
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They are almost always victims, psychics, or helpless bystanders, or sometimes romantic
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interests.
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The shows that I listen to are not big on romance, but sometimes there's an undercurrent
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of that in some episodes.
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Minorities are almost never portrayed, certainly not racial and ethnic minorities, with the exception
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of Irish who are often portrayed as cops, and the Italians all talk like this.
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Other appearances by minorities, Mexican Americans, and shows set in the Southwest, they tend
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to be comic relief.
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And these stories that I'm talking about, the detective and mystery shows, black people
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hardly ever appear.
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They just were not.
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They weren't there.
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So it's an interesting picture of the popular culture as one of the leading voices of
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the popular culture, entertainment radio, would have people think what America was at
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the time.
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Oh, and Germans sometimes did show up on the shows, and looking at my notes here, before
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World War II, Germans tended to be always portrayed as scientists, doctors, or professors.
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Once World War II started, Germans were portrayed as spies, sadistic villains, or occasionally
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as sympathetic refugees.
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So with that, I want to mention some of my favorite old-time radio sites on the World
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Wide Web, OTR on the WWW.
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The first site I stumbled over about five or six years ago, which led me to discover
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this world, was the OTR Network Library.
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That's www.otr.net, maintained by a fellow named Ken Varga.
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If you look at the website, it's labeled as beta.
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As near as I can tell, it's been in beta ever since I discovered it.
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It's got an excellent selection of shows.
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They are listed alphabetically by title.
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Unfortunately, the shows are all in real audio format.
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Given that the site dates from about 2005, real audio at that time was one of the dominant
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streaming formats.
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It would have been a logical choice back then, if you wanted to listen to an NPR show,
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where very likely was in real audio format.
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Now there are many alternatives to it.
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It is one of the most encumbered codecs, and if you're a Linux user, you're in trouble.
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There used to be a very nice spin of real audio for Linux based on the Helix player.
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Unlike real audio for Windows, it was very well-behaved.
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It did not run low programs in the background without telling you that it was doing it.
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It did not phone home to Seattle every five minutes.
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It just played.
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Unfortunately, the Helix project is dead.
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There hasn't been an update to their website, which is player.helixcommunity.org.
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There hasn't been an update to their website, and going on to two years, you can still
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download real for Linux, either in sources, and for some versions, an RPM format.
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Now I did get it working on my Slackware box using RPM to TGZ, which is a little program
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which will convert an RPM style package into a TGZ for use with Slackware.
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It will work flawlessly in the only case in which I've ever used RPM to TGZ.
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I have it already on my Debian machine because I installed it before the project died, and
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my Debian machine being Debian, it's been happily running squeeze now for two years.
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But I cannot get it from my new 64-bit computer.
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The 64-bit sources just are not available.
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One show that they have an excellent selection of on OTR.net, one that is one of the best
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written and consistently best active of any of the old-time radio shows, is Nightbeat,
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in which Randy Stone, reporter for the Chicago Star, I believe, prowls the Chicago night,
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looking for material for his next day's column.
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These are mysteries, sometimes they are what we would call human entry stories, but they
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are excellently done.
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And I would recommend that as a starting point for just about anyone.
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It's also notable for what may well be one of the worst radio shows ever done, Jeff
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Regan, investigator, done by Jack Webb before the Dragnet days.
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If you recall Dragnet, you will recall that Jack Webb did not try to act in Dragnet.
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Jack Webb couldn't act, and if you listen to any of his early radio efforts, it becomes
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very, very clear.
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Other interesting shows that I first discovered there was The Man Called X, about Ken Thurston,
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US agent, dispatched two trouble spots throughout the world to shoot the trouble.
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One little twist almost in every episode of A Man Called X, there's a scene in which
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hello, I'm Ken Thurston, and the other person says, oh, are you The Man They Called X?
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Which leads me to think that X's cover really wasn't all that good.
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There also I discovered Mr. Keane, Tracer of Lost Persons, that was a show I actually heard
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of.
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At that site, I also discovered Mr. Keane, Tracer of Lost Persons.
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That was a show that I had actually heard of.
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It was on many, many years, Mr. Keane was played by at least two different actors.
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Hopefully Mr. Keane will never be looking for me because every lost person he tried to
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trace seemed to end up dead.
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I do want to note at this point that even though I'm talking about these shows in the
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context of OTR.net, because that's where I first discovered them.
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They are available at many of the other sites I'm going to mention.
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There's no site that has exclusivity on these.
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Because as nearest anyone can tell, these shows are not under any copyright.
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They were made at a time when copyright actually had to be applied for, which is no longer
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the case, as of 1978.
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Most of them were never submitted for copyright, and in any event they have aged out of the
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copyright as it would have applied under the laws of their time, they will have a link
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in the show notes to a nice article about the copyright status of these shows.
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Other site I'd like to mention, a very nice one, one of my favorites, is Old Time Radio
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Fans, that's www.oldtimeradiofans.com.
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This one offers shows an MP3 format.
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It's a much smaller site than OTR.net, very much a hobbyist site.
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The shows are listed under categories such as mystery, sci-fi, drama, variety, and so
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on.
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I have pretty much exhausted the shows that I would like to listen to on this site.
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Selection is relatively small, but it has good taste and high quality.
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Another site that I like is OldradioWorld.com, maintained by a fellow named Brendan Tran.
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It's much like the site I just discussed.
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It's a hobbyist site.
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The shows are an MP3 format.
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It's a limited selection.
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Mr. Tran has concentrated on his personal favorites, the shows that he's enjoyed.
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He's not trying to provide a library of wide-ranging shows.
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One show I stumbled over there that I quite enjoyed was one called The Adventures of Leonidas
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Witheroll.
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It is not classic literature, but I enjoyed it because Leonidas Witheroll is a character
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created under a pen name by a mystery writer named Phoebe Atwood Taylor.
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And I really do enjoy her books.
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If you like mysteries and have never read the AC Mayo stories or the Leonidas Witheroll
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stories, chase them down.
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There are a brand of mystery or a type of mystery that's referred to as a cozy in which
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the story is told for the telling of the story, usually an amusing story with slightly
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cock eye characters, not for the quality of the puzzle.
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Another site that I'm going to mention, not one of my favorites, but it has a great
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historical interest, is the CBS Radio Mystery Theater fan site, www.cbsrmt.com.
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It claims to have all 1,399 episodes of the CBS Radio Mystery Theater hosted by EG Marshall
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except for its last year when it was hosted by Tammy Grine.
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These shows are fairly unevenly written, but some of them are fine, there are a couple
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in which a young Abraham Lincoln is featured as the detective, one in which a young Thomas
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Jefferson is featured as a detective.
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Most of them though, as I read the capsule descriptions of the shows, seem to lean a little
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more to suspense than to mystery.
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They do have some interesting Sherlock Holmes adaptations, off the top of my head, I think
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they have a version of The Hound of the Baskervilles and a couple of others, they have an excellent
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search feature, so if you want to look them up, you can just search for Sherlock Holmes.
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I must warn any true Sherlockians amongst you who want to go listen to these, that they
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do violence to the original stories by introducing subplots and characters, which are not actually
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in the canon, and if you are a Sherlock, you will know to which canon I refer.
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Probably the site I visit the most is the Old Time Radio Theater, which originally was
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entitled The OTR Mystery Theater, and the URL is still www.mysteryshows.com, maintained
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by a fellow named Brad.
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These shows are an MP3 format, it is a hobbyist site, it's one of the largest selections
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of all, he claims to have almost 50,000 episodes of various shows, it is a membership site,
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there are approximately 2500 episodes of shows available on the front page of the website,
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at no charge without having to pay a membership fee.
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For a $10 lifetime membership fee, you get access to the rest of the library, and there
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are some excellent, excellent shows there, I'm going to mention two shows that are on
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the front page, which might wet your appetite, there's one called Crime Photographer, sometimes
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it aired under the name of Casey Crime Photographer, it usually opens and closes with Casey and
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his assistant Annie hanging out at the Blue Note, their favorite bar, where the bar
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keep ethylbert presides over the festivities.
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In between the two visits to the Blue Note, Casey and Annie in the search for pictures for
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his newspaper, find themselves in some kind of mystery or other, it may be a murder mystery,
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it may be a robbery, it may be blackmail, it may be extortion fraud, but some sort of
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mystery, it's generally acted with a nice sense of humor, the atmosphere is kept light,
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it's hardly a dark, noir show of any sort, but it's quite good fun.
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And another one there that's fun is called Mystery is My Hobby, in which the amateur sleuth
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Barton Drake appears with the police detective to solve the mystery, it's a classic buddy
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show, but instead of two cops or two amateurs is the amateur and the cop.
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Every episode manages to end with Barton Drake explaining that he solved the case, because
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Mystery is My Hobby.
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There is also at the internet archive a very large, old time radio collection.
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It's so large, it's almost impossible to navigate, unless you have some notion of what
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you're looking for, the choices are just overwhelming.
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The shows are available in MP3 or Odd formats, I'm going to mention three shows, I've discovered
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there which I enjoy listening to, one is called The Fat Man, which opens with something
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like, he crosses the street, he walks into the drugstore, he's putting a penny into
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the scale, weight 239 pounds, fortune danger.
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And that cast you back to a time in the culture when 239 pounds was considered fat as I walked
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down the street, it seems to me to be average anymore, but that's another story.
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Another interesting show you can find there is Rex Saunders, in which Rex Harrison plays
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with the detective.
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They're quite well done, the titles always have the word murder in them, the titles are
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a little heavy, but the show itself is a lot of fun.
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And then there are episodes of The Saint, starring Vincent Price.
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Now those of you who are familiar with The Saint Stories will know that The Saint is an
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Englishman, Vincent Price is not.
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Over the years, Leslie Chartres wrote The Saint Stories, he created a very firm and clear
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characterization of The Saint, and Vincent Price is not yet.
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If you recall when Roger Moore, who played The Saint on television, played James Bond,
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my feeling was what you got was not James Bond, Sean Connery was James Bond, always
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will be.
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What you got was James Bond, if James Bond had actually been The Saint.
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So what you get with the Vincent Price version of The Saint is something entirely other than
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Leslie Chartres actual Saint, but these shows are generally fun to listen to, they light
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hearted, and they have a twist of humor to them.
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To other sites I want to mention briefly, there's one called My Old Radio World, www.myoldradio
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world.
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This is a Canadian site, the one thing I don't like about it is that by default the shows
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play an internal player, some kind of script on the web page.
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I love the internal players, that's just me, but I have to say this site has an immense
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collection over 50,000 episodes and probably a much greater variety, geographic variety
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than the others, it has a lot of BBC shows, Australian shows, Canadian shows, site is
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exactly out of Canada, and right under the auspices of a Canadian computer services and
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supply company in Montreal, and it's worth checking out if you're looking for something different
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from what you would find at these other sites, which are pretty heavily weighted towards
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United States Radio.
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The last one I want to mention is Radio Lovers, www.radiolovers.com, again an MP3 format.
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It's part of the board.com network, I went to board.com and it appears to be an online
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game humor and all around how to fall into the computer for hours at a time and not accomplish
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anything, site, the sort of games that would appeal say to my girlfriend, she likes to play
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word games, gravel and mixed up word type puzzles, and it seems to be that sort of games
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and some joke sites and so on and so forth.
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Radio Lovers.com does not appear to be particularly commercial, it's not a membership site
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or anything like that, the one thing, again it's MP3 format, but the one thing I do want
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to mention if you decide to visit there looking for something, the collection is much larger
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than it appears on the front page.
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For each of their categories there is a link to show more, and if you click that you will
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see many more titles than appear on the front page for that particular category.
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There's also a link to show all the shows and it opens up to quite an extensive list
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arranged alphabetically by title.
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I know that there are many other old time radio show sites out there on the internet.
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I've stumbled over some of them, but these are the ones that I have found the most enjoyable,
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the ones that keep me coming back to them.
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If you want a diversion to listen to something new and to realize that at one time radio was
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more than a box spewing hate and cheap mass market music tracks, check out some of these
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old time radio selections, I think it'll be pleasantly surprised.
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You can return to the thrilling days of yesterday year with Sarge of Preston and King, strongest
|
||||
of the lead dogs.
|
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio, DOS Arc.
|
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday on day through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener by yourself.
|
||||
If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
|
||||
it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the economical computer
|
||||
club.
|
||||
We are as funded by the binary revolution at binref.com, all binref projects are crowd
|
||||
sponsored by LUNA pages.
|
||||
From shared hosting to custom private clouds, go to LUNA pages.com for all your hosting
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needs.
|
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Unless otherwise stasis, today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution,
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share a like, lead us our lives.
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