From Newsgroup: comp.lang.mumps
<div>If you're in a situation where you have a challenge or accolade that needs to be done via Skill Song (or you just wanna go for a massive personal best for combo score), immediately turn off your radio.</div><div></div><div></div><div>You can go do a couple races, some events, or just drive around in Freeroam as long as it's off for at least 15ish mins. Once the radio has been off for a while, turn it to the classical radio station (this also works in FH4 too). A song will be in its final notes of ending, then the boring radio host will come on and announce a skill song. Since it's the classical station and the songs are generally longer than the other stations, so you can always get a guaranteed 4-7 minute skill song if you need it.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>come on come on turn the radio on song download mp4 in english</div><div></div><div>Download File ✒ ✒ ✒
https://t.co/6Bmr11dA5P</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>This hasn't always been the case, and I don't know if this has to do with the amount of time I've had my Spotify account or if something about the algorithm has drastically changed - but whenever I start a radio based off a song or artist (which is with the intention to find a NEW artist or NEW music that is related to the song/artist I'm starting the radio off of) it just creates essentially a playlist of music I've been listening to - and not even within the same genre off the song.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I've realized that I haven't found any new artists or any new music, and just continuously listen to the same things over and over again which is quite depressing. The point of the song radio or at least how I use it is to discover new artists that are in the same realm of the artist I'm listening to, and I think you all at Spotify are putting everyone - artist AND listener - at a huge detrimental disadvantage by having it go that way because then there is no discovery for new artists and there is no way for listeners to get into new music without scouring the platform instead of giving good recommendations based off your algorithm. More than anything I want to be able to discover new artists based off song radio, not just hear the same songs I've been listening to. If I wanted to listen to those songs, I would just continue to listen to them. Especially since maybe when I start a song radio off something that is midwest-emo/indie, it'll still play hyperpop/rap in the same playlist which are two completely different genre's and moods.</div><div></div><div></div><div>A few updates ago, after any user created playlist that I was listening to finished, and assuming I have "Autoplay" turned on in my options, the queue order would jump immediately to "Recommended Songs - Based on the songs in this playlist" and start playing from the top.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Recently, however, a new update switched this turn order. Now, after any user created playlist ends, it instead jumps to what's called "Radio." The problem is, this "Radio" generates roughly the SAME tracks every single time I'm finished with my playlist. For example, after my metal playlist ends, instead of finding new music, I end up hearing the same songs that I've already heard or liked.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I mentioned in my first post that the "icing on the cake" would be to introduce the "Not Interested" feature back into the "Recommended" playlist.. so that newly generated music becomes fine-tuned for the listener's enjoyment.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Meg S_C. you totally rock! You solved my problem! Voice control is gone, and Siri won't come on unless I've already unlocked my phone. Now, my dog can stand on the 'home' button when the phone is in my front pocket, and it no longer calls my barber shop on Facetime.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Susan Burton's melancholic essay about being trapped in an airport with her sister at Christmas was turned into a 2006 kids comedy Unaccompanied Minors. In 2012, Mike Birbliglia and Ira Glass co-wrote Sleepwalk With Me, based on a story that Mike told on the radio. Mike directed and starred in it. It won an audience award at Sundance and was released theatrically by IFC Films.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Escape to Margaritaville. Parrotheads, your ship has come in. From multi-platinum singer, songwriter and author Jimmy Buffett comes a radio paradise of great music, live broadcasts of Buffett's concerts and other unique programs.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I wondered how such a prejudiced song could have become the anthem of ice cream and childhood summers. I learned that though Browne was fairly creative in his lyrics, the song's premise and its melody are nearly as old as America itself. As often happens with matters of race, something that is rather vanilla in origin is co-opted and sprinkled with malice along the way.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Here in the nation's capital, the cherry blossoms have come and gone. This means the warm weather will soon bring out the ice cream trucks, and I'll be confronted once again by their inconvenient truth. It's not new knowledge that matters of race permeate the depths of our history and infiltrate the most innocent of experiences, even the simple pleasure of ice cream (who can forget Eddie Murphy's famous, NSFW routine about the poor black experience with ice cream trucks?). However, when the reach of racism robs me of fond memories from my childhood, it feels intensely personal again.</div><div></div><div></div><div>When the alarm goes off, say: "Alexa, stop" to switch it off for the day, or: "Alexa, snooze" to get an extra 10 minutes in bed before the alarm sounds again. If you have multiple Alexa devices, then you need to speak to the one you want the alarm to come from. If you ask the Echo in your kitchen for an alarm, that's where it will play by default, not from the Echo in your bedroom.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Whether it\u2019s a 5 minute trip or an hour long journey, nothing helps you get in the groove like music. The right song can turn a stressful morning into a peaceful commute, liven up the trip to dinner with friends, or break the ice with your driver.</div><div></div><div></div><div>In June 2016, the Rockettes performed on the Great Stage to celebrate New York City in The New York Spectacular. Centered around the trip of a lifetime for two kids, who, while on a vacation in New York, are separated from their parents, the city magically comes to life to show them its many splendid wonders.</div><div></div><div></div><div>This app doesn't come preinstalled on the Family Hub, so make sure to install it first. Tap Apps, and then swipe down to the Available Apps section. Tap Install next to iHeartRADIO. Once it's downloaded, open the iHeartRADIO app, and then tap Accept. From there you can choose to listen to your favorite radio stations.</div><div></div><div></div><div>SIMON: The album begins with a song about a singer interested in someone else. And then the song seemed to follow a storyline of two people who - not giving anything away - do become involved. You're trying to put together a kind of - start to finish - an endurance love story...</div><div></div><div></div><div>NGONDA: I think so, yeah. Depends on the person in the situation. I think when it comes to something, if it's a deep love or a deep feeling, it's hard to bring it out because you treasure and you hold it so much, because if you feel like if you let it out and show someone else that side of you, you could get hurt.</div><div></div><div></div><div>NGONDA: It could be about anything you want it to be. I just created something by borrowing things I've witnessed in life, you know? But I don't know anyone with rainbow flares. I don't - I have a couple of female friends with curly hair. But I'm not singing about them specifically. Whenever I write a song, I don't know, I have no idea what I'm going to write about. And what I write about is just what comes out.</div><div></div><div></div><div>NGONDA: Well, yeah. And it doesn't come out magically. Like, I don't just sit there and it - I will always think of something. I do struggle some - well, a lot - most of the time I struggle. And it's just finding the best thing you can possibly find. Sorry. I mean, you're just asking, what's this story about? I'm over here talking about songwriting 101.</div><div></div><div></div><div>For several years, the voice at the heart of it all was Terry Berry, the original Walmart Radio legend. (Fun fact: This smooth talker remains at Walmart as a Facilitator at Walmart Academy but returned to the radio studio for a few encore shows in 2021, pictured below with DJ Bo and former DJ Antonio.)</div><div></div><div></div><div>After in-store radio programming took a six-year pause, it relaunched in 2016 in response to associate feedback. And it returned with a unique twist: We invited store associates to audition to become the new DJ! Submissions were so good that not one, but two associates won a spot behind the mic!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Cyberpunk 2077 is chock full of music that can play through radios, but sometimes you might not hear a song you were hoping to rock out to. In times like these, knowing how to change the radio station in Cyberpunk 2077 will come in handy. This mechanic is pretty easy to use and it even allows you to select specific stations.</div><div></div><div></div><div>It's been nice to continue this way of connecting with musicians and bands, as in the time that we're still living in where we can't have you actually come into the studio, because, well you're across the globe right now, but it's it's been nice. It's been nice to connect with folks right now. So Laura, and Mike, welcome. I just want to say congratulations on that new record, which is due out shortly.</div><div></div><div></div><div>LAURA MARLING: We met a couple of years ago, when a mutual friend, my guitarist, a very talented man introduced us at an after show party after one of my gigs. And Mike came up to me and said, "I want you to come and sing on something that I've been working on." Usually I would politely decline and walk away. But for some reason I said yes. I was familiar with Mike's oeuvre , as it were, and I went into the studio the next day, and we ended up making the first LUMP record in the following couple of weeks. So it was totally out of the blue and totally random, and we didn't know each other very well. Mike's musical world is very different to mine, and then we ended up touring that album, we loved it. We love playing it live. Then completely unexpectedly, we did it again. And here we are. So it's been it's been random so far.</div><div></div><div></div><div>That was good. You caught her at the right time, probably flying high off of a gig where you're playing with Neil Young, but then to be able to find that opportunity to just ask and then you just never know what's gonna happen when you just say yes to something, which is kind of the beautiful thing. When you started recording together, and you didn't really know each other, what did that kind of atmosphere contribute to kind of being collaborators when you haven't really had the time to really feel each other out? You've kind of established I would assume some roles in a collaboration. Like you said it was kind of off the cuff, but how did those roles in the collaboration come together? Because it sounds like it happened pretty quickly.</div><div></div><div> dca57bae1f</div>
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