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To: raccoonradio

A friend of mine ran a ‘pirate radio station’ in Cincinnati in the 1970’s for a time, using a army surplus generator and transmitter rig.

They had a ball broadcasting albums yet to be released to the public, in FULL. The buzz throughout the Cincy region was ‘how did they get that before anyone else?”

Fact was, it was a relative of one of the more famous radio families in Cincinnati, thats how....(chuckle)

Because it was mobile - they hooked the trailer up and went to any place big enough to park without being noticed for a few hours, they never got caught. Drove everybody from Si Leis to the FCC insane for over a year, til his dad figured it out, and made em stop.

Still laugh about it to this day.


5 posted on 02/10/2009 11:40:12 AM PST by Badeye (There are no 'great moments' in Moderate Political History. Only losses.)
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To: Badeye; All

yes in some ways pirates can be entertaining and fun, but when they park right next to the frequency of a legit station—that pays lots of money for licenses and
equipment—and causes them interference, not so funny...
But that is interesting about the connection to the
“radio family”

(Lib) blogger Dan Kennedy on this situation
http://medianation.blogspot.com/2009/02/hypocritical-shepard-fairey.html

The hypocritical Shepard Fairey

As one of my students, Marc Larocque, puts it, “Shepard Fairey is a hypocritical scumbag.” That’s really the only proper reaction you can have upon learning that Fairey, who’s fighting a copyright complaint lodged by the Associated Press, has himself charged an Austin artist with copyright violation for doing exactly the same thing.

The artist, Baxter Orr, took Fairey’s iconic image of Andre the Giant and put a respiratory mask on it — precisely the sort of “transformative” use that Fairey is relying on in his own repurposing of the AP’s Barack Obama photo to make his Obama “Hope” poster. Boston Globe cartoonist Dan Wasserman has all the details.

Fairey is up to his neck in it at the moment, filing a pre-emptive lawsuit against the AP and defending himself against vandalism charges brought by the Boston police. I still think his Obama poster is protected under the fair-use exception, as I wrote last week. But so is Orr’s Andre the Giant image. These are nearly identical cases, and it’s amazing that Fairey doesn’t see it that way.

Update: Gee, Fairey’s problem with Orr couldn’t have anything to do with the fact that Orr seems less enamored of Obama than Fairey does. Could it? (See:
http://www.baxterorr.bigcartel.com/product/dope


8 posted on 02/10/2009 11:43:23 AM PST by raccoonradio
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