Friday, May 10, 2013

Review Assignment


Tune in to Z100 for great music!  This is one of the most popular radio stations in New York City, and northern New Jersey. Z100 is currently owned by Clear Channel Communications. They broadcast their show from the Empire State Building, in Manhattan, New York. This popular station plays pop/contemporary music and has about 5 million listeners daily. They also have one of the most frequently visited websites amongst all radio station websites throughout the United States.
            Since they mostly play a mixture of pop, R&B, dance, and alternative, the Z100 mostly attracts an audience between the ages of 18-34. Z100 has different “ZJ” personalities for every part of the day. JJ takes up the afternoons, Mo’Bouce takes up the evenings, Trey takes up the nights, and Shelley Wade is usually in charge of overnights. The morning show on Z100 is extremely popular. It’s called Elvis Duran and the Z100 Morning Show, also known as the morning “zoo”. The current morning show includes Elvis Duran, Ryan Seacrest, Danielle Monaro, Bethany Watson, Greg T., Froggy and Skeery Jones. It features many different reports including “Danielle’s ‘Sleaze Report’”, “Phone Taps”, contests, weather updates, and news reports. The Sleaze Report is broadcasted by Danielle and is usually about the latest “sleaze” in entertainment, politics, sports, or whatever it may be that is trending. The Phone Taps are prerecorded and aired at 7:30 A.M. and at 9:30 A.M. Listeners are able to apply to phone tap someone they know and Z1oo usually chooses the best one. A different ZJ is in charge of conduction the Phone Tap each time. All of their phone taps are listen on their website and can be listened to at any time. The radio station 92.3 NOW and 103.5 KTU are very similar to Z100, but nowhere near as good!













The Best Internet Radio Stations of 2013
By Paul Gil, About.com Guide
Ads:

·         Online Radio Stations

·         Internet Radio Music

·         Web Radio

·         Live Radio

·         Last FM Radio
March, 2013
This list is randomly ordered. Many items on this list are 'hubs' of radio stations with multiple channels. This changing list is compiled from reader suggestions. The evaluation criteria is a subjective blend of music selection size, ease of use, friendly navigation, availability, system requirements, and convenience of service. Nominate your own favorite radio stations hereBe warned: Internet radio does consume significant bandwidth over the hours. Streaming music is best listened to at home where you have a large or unlimited bandwidth allotment on DSL or cable.
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Like Last.FM, Maestro is about social networking with other music fans. You can trade playlists, follow user discussions on music genres, and discover new artists through conversations. You can even store some of your music at their remote storage site. If you like Facebook and Last.FM, do give Maestro a try.
Listen To Free MusicRdio.comEndless music without ads. Get Rdio free today!
Like Online Radio?www.spotify.com/us/for-musicTry Spotify Instead. All Your Music Online & On the Go. Sign Up Now!
Rhapsody® Free MusicRhapsody.com/FreeTrialSign Up & Get Unlimited Music Access. 14 Day Free Trial!
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Pirate Radio Network offers two different means of listening to their broadcasts: via web tuner or via a downloadable special player. Hundrds of music genres abound here, and you're bound to discover new music that you will like at Pirate Radio Network. For those of you who use a PC: you can even make your own radio station and start broadcasting yourself as an amateur DJ. You will have to install a software package to try this, but it's definitely worth trying if you've ever wanted to DJ.
3. Last.fm
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Social networking is strong at Last.FM: you can connect with other users and trade suggestions and friendly banter. You can vote that you 'love' or 'hate' a particular artist or song. The recommendation will even try to help you choose songs by taking your favorites and extrapolating from there. The service does cost 3 dollars per month, and sometimes it feels like Facebook, but Last.FM is a crowd pleaser. Try it and decide for yourself if you agree with the thousands of users who frequent this site.
4. Spotify
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Spotify is arguably the best free music service available today.  While Spotify is limited to the USA, Spain, the UK,and parts of Europe at this time (sorry, Canadians and the rest of you), it's already a massive hit with listeners. As they surmount music licensing challenges, Spotify hopes to expand into other countries soon.
As for the service itself: Spotify is a fast and reliable radio system that outstrips the competition.  Spotify differentiates itself from iTunes and Pandora by behaving as a massive external hard drive  (i.e. it plays full songs and albums as if you owned the CD). As a recommendation and discovery tool, Spotify also stands out:  it reads your own music collection and playlists from your hard drives, and then suggests new releases, top-10 lists, and your friends' music lists.  The interface is clean, and the search box is very convenient.
The service is free and unlimited for six months.  After that, users can continue to receive free music with some limitations on number of hours, or else they can subscribe for five dollars a month.
Definitely try Spotify.com. 
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The Inferno specializes in 'eclectic' listening: blending many different genres into a single playlist. David Bowie, Elvis Presley, Lady Gaga, Kid Rock, Led Zeppelin, Cyndi Lauper... playlists that are compiled by both DJ's and user music requests. If you have broad tastes in music, The Inferno might be a good radio station for you.
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SHOUTcast is a massive selection of individual radio stations (over 700 pages worth). In fact, there are so many stations here, it is intimidating to even find one in the first place. But if you like niche music that is hard to find, definitely try SHOUTcast. Gothic metal from the 90's, big band swing remixes, German synth music... if there is a place to find niche music, it would be here at SHOUTcast.
7. Pandora
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Pandora uses a form of low-level artificial intelligence: it tries to learn what your music habits are, and then suggests new music that you might like. The 'recommendation engine' behind Pandora is still very new, and uses arguably shallow criteria for deciding the DNA of a song. But thousands of users love Pandora, and if you live in the USA, definitely try this service. Sorry, American computers only... machines outside the USA will be blocked. Copyright agreements are annoying, yes.
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Grooveshark is a real crowd pleaser! It is not a conventional Internet radio station where a DJ or database designs the playlists. Instead, you choose your own songs with the playlist creator. But much more than your own computer, there are hundreds of thousands of songs to choose from at Grooveshark. If you're willing to put in ten minutes of effort to design your own playlist, Grooveshark will not disappoint. Advertising is a sidebar of visual ads on the right, which can be removed for 3 dollars per month.


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Streaming music sites are a dime-a-dozen, but internet radio services—the kind where you press play, sit back, and enjoy music that you know you'll love and only interact if you hear something you don't—are a rarer breed. Sometimes you're in the mood to just listen to music, not be a DJ. This week we're going to take a look at five of the best internet radio services, based on your nominations.
For those times when you don't feel like searching for something to hear or curating a playlist, internet radio services deliver on the promise to press play on a genre or song-based radio station and know you're going to hear something you like. Sometimes you can interact with the station, other times you can't. We asked you which internet radio services you thought were the best, you weighed in with dozens of nominations, and now we're back to look at the top five.
The poll is closed and the votes are counted! To see which of the top five picks you voted in as the winner, head over to our weekly hive five followup post and discuss the results!
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We've mentioned TuneIn Radio before, but the mobile component is only one part of what makes TuneIn such a great service. TuneIn lets you listen to live radio stations on the air anywhere in the world, wherever you happen to be. From electronic stations in Europe to talk shows in Africa, you have the option to search the globe by location, genre, station type, or even name or call sign, and start listening. You can take TuneIn on the go on your Android, iPhone or iPad, Blackberry, WebOS, or Windows Phone by downloading their free mobile app. If you're willing to drop $1, you can get the Pro version for iOS, Android, and Blackberry, which allows you to record live radio for playback later, pause live radio, rewind, and play back, and more. If you want the real radio experience without the AM/FM tuner, TuneIn gives it to you.

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Soma.fm has been broadcasting alternative, electronic, trip-hop, and more since around 2000, long before most streaming music came into its prime, and long before people thought there was money in online radio—I have pleasant memories of listening to Soma.fm for track ideas when I was a DJ. The service is completely user and listener-supported, which means no ads or commercials during your broadcasts, and the channels and programs aired at Soma.fm are rarely heard anywhere else. This means you need to familiarize yourself with the show schedules so you catch the ones you want to hear, and you should make a point to donate to the service to keep it alive. Soma.fm has mobile apps for iOS and Android, and mobile-friendly sites for just about any mobile device with a browser.

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Pandora is the juggernaut of internet radio. Based on the Music Genome Project, Pandora's promise has always been to deliver you great new music based on the music you already enjoy. Give Pandora the name of one of your favorite artists, or a song that you really enjoy, and then sit back, relax, and listen to similar songs by similar musicians that you'll definitely love. You interact with Pandora only by thumbs-up or thumbs-down, with a certain number of song skips allowed in a given time period. Pandora mobile apps are available for Android, iOS, Blackberry, and WebOS. Pandora is completely free, although ad-supported, and if you want nearly unlimited skips (six per hour), higher music quality, and no ads, you can drop $36/year for Pandora One.

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Slacker Radio takes personalization to a whole new level. There are hundreds of genre specific channels you can play at any time, with playlists that are curated by actual human DJs who love music and love their genres. Then, as you listen, you can personalize those stations even more by giving Slacker feedback about what you love, and banishing artists that you hate—something other interactive services won't do. Add to this Slacker's massive music library, stuffed full of new music, and the actual human element where stations are constantly rotating and changing playlists with new tunes and removing stale ones no one likes, and you have a great internet radio service with just the right amount of personalization. Mobile apps are available for iOS, Android, Blackberry, WebOS, Windows Phone, and more. Slacker is free and ad-supported, but if you're willing to drop $4/month, you can get Slacker Plus, which removes the ads, gives you unlimited song skips, song lyrics, and station caching so you can listen for a while offline. $10/mo gets you Slacker Premium, which gives you everything Plus offers as well as the on-demand artist and album playback, single-artist stations, and the ability to create playlists of the songs you've heard and enjoy.

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We all remember when Spotify arrived in the US, after our own glowing review of it, and we were all thrilled. Even though Spotify is a full-service music player, music search tool, and jukebox, it also has some great hands-off radio features in the form of shared, collaborative playlists that you can subscribe to, and a great radio service that plays songs based on popular artists, or a musician you provide. You can search popular stations organized by artist, or you can use the genre tag cloud to play something based on your favorite type of music. Spotify is more than just a radio service, but it's a pretty good radio service too. Spotify is free and ad-supported. Mobile apps are available for Android, iOS, and Symbian, but to use them you'll need a $10/mo Spotify Premium account, which also nets you offline mode, better sound quality, and no ads. If the desktop app is enough for you, the $5/mo Spotify Unlimited account just gets you the music and radio without the ads.







 Jerry Barmash on February 27, 2013 11:32 AM
http://www.mediabistro.com/fishbowlny/files/2013/02/NOW-FM.jpgWNOW/92.3 NOW FM is making changes to its weekday lineup. Program director Rick Gillette is switching everyone with the exception of morning hostTy Bentli.
After that you need a scorecard to keep track. Micki Gamez is back in the midday slot, which she temporarily relinquished for afternoons when formerNick Cannon got ill.
“She’s the perfect foil to go up against the Seacrest syndicated debacle in middays across the street,” Gillette tells FishbowlNY.
Zann moves into the afternoon drive spot. He had been on evenings since last June.
“We moved Zann because she’s a breath of fresh air, and New York needs some fresh air in afternoons,” Gillette says.  “She’s the obnoxious chick who’s going to bully her way on the already packed number 2 train headed for Brooklyn every late afternoon.”
The station’s reworked 6 to 10 p.m. shift is led by Toro, previously on  from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Toro is a Nuyorican born in the projects overlooking Coney Island.
“Renowned and well paid in the tri-state for his amazing DJ/mixing skills, [Toro] has no future in radio outside of New York because he is just SO New York,” Gillette says. “92.3 NOW is so all about New York [so] we had to let this native son out of his cage a little earlier every day, allowing him to entertain the masses in the early evening and then prowl the late night club scene after his show every night.”

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