Category: LUVeR (Page 9 of 21)

Re: OUR X-MAS CARRD! (Champ)

frank, linda, mikee!
got ur xmas card in the mail! thanx a lot! we wish you a pretty rocking xxx-mas to you and the rest of the gang!
btw, we put it in the refrigerator so everyone in Malo Funhouse (where we live) can see it…hope all is well with you in this yuletide schmultide! we dont celebrate it as much but we like the spirit of good times and giving…im not sure if told u already but rhea and i and 2 other friends from LA are going to the philippines in 3 weeks and we are xcited about that..make sure to send you some pics of how the “real beaches ” look like over there! B) rhea also sends her best wishes!
you guys are awesome! right on!
-champ

also check out videos ive been making:
www.youtube.com/champoyhate

mikee,,im not sure if youve check out the links to the radio shows yet but i added some text to it to describe the shows…its all short and simple -just a run down on wat the show is about…im close to getting the post-care done..hopefully after all the shows we play this week…

* * * * *

GREAT, Champ!

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

Seasons Greeting

Hi, listening to your station is lots of fun. Speaking of disability, I understand as a blind person.

Merry Christmas

Gianfranco

PS. Reply so I’ll feel beter that my email came in…

* * * * *

Gianfranco, this means a lot to us at LUVER! keep listening!

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

Sunday on the Shaman’s Den

ah yes, the second best bad band in history! THE VELVET UNDERGROUND paled to THE SUPERHEROES of THE OUTRAGEOUS BEAUTY REVUE!

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

* * * * *

Frank Moore’s Shaman’s Den
November 29, 2009
Richie Unterberger
author of “White Light/White Heat” The Velvet Underground Day By Day
published by Jawbone Press
http://www.jawbonepress.com/2009/02/white-lightwhite-heat.html

To tune into this live, video show, go to http://www.luver.com/listen.html
and click on “watch here”.

Show starts at 8pm Pacific Time

web radio broadcast

hello mikee and frank..im writing you regarding the radio show i was gonna do…i would still be interested to do the radio show and have been working on it…well..i actually got another friend to do it with me too but we ended up doing the show longer than an hour -so im not sure if you’d still want to have it played on LUVER radio-if not -its totally cool, i understand..i think the show was meant to be 2 hours but sometimes we always ended up doing overtime,,yes! in some cases way over time! we have also been archiving it on the open minded website – weve also been trying to archive our house shows that happen in our house every now and then…just so you’ll know, you guys have been really a big inspiration for us in doing all this…we did a house show last weekend and we broadcasted it live -we are still working on technical stuff -like sound but its just fun to be able to work on it with some of our friends..we dont really have much shows but lots of our friends have been having such a blast broadcasting on the nicecast online radio software -mostly other friends are usually listening…our roomate does a talk show on mondays with a bunch of people and another friend plays electronica on fridays…thats about it for now…we are just figuring out how to make this all work since the software is only in my laptop..anyways, let me know if its posible for you to rebroadcast the show in LUVER Radio. heres a link to one of the shows. anyways, mikee…still looking forward to see that record cover u are doing for the recording we wanna release with frank. i am currently putting together the post-care comix and a few people werent able to follow thru but i was asking some of the people that did turn up theirs to do several pages more so i was wondering mikee, if you’d like to do a page or two more about artists? you dont have to but im just asking in case u have some time…well, anyways, its just hard to get people to submit and a lot of those that said yeah, never really do…but im really hoping to get it together before the year ends..anyways…i am going home to the philippines for a few weeks in the beginning of the year and would love toturn people on to the stuff you guys do and see which poles people belong to… .hope all is well with u guys! right on! -champ

“We should go forth on the shortest walk perchance, in the spirit of undying adventure, never to return, – prepared to send back our embalmed hearts only as relics to our desolate kingdoms” -Henry David Thoreau

* * * * *

first, people, champ needs original comics about artists or the artist life!

now, Champ, we can just put your show at the end of a programmed block so that you don’t need to have a fixed ending time. Mikee can talk tech with you. I am also interested in the shows by your friends.

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

Re: Shaman’s Den: Kevin of Jawbone Press

(Erika wrote:)
Last nights guest on the Shaman’s Den was Kevin Becketti of Jawbone Press and independent music book publisher based in London and San Francisco. Kevin is their San Francisco man getting the word out about their upcoming books, getting their books to distributors and looking for new book ideas. Some of the new books that they have are “White Light White Heat: The Velvet Underground Day by Day, “To Live is to Die: The Life and Death of Metallica’s Cliff Burton,” “The Impossible Dream: The Story of Scott Walker and The Walker Brothers,” and much more! It was amazing to hear about all the books that they have coming out or have in the works.

Kevin talked about how he was an actor and then had a job with a tech company. They thought he was doing a good job at the tech company but he said he often did not know what he was talking about and they were always having him make announcements for new products that never came out. Working with books about music is more his style as he loves music. He likes working with books where there is a definite product that will be coming out. He said you would think he said that he would know all kinds of musical history and could quote things but he doesn’t. He does enjoy doing research on bands and musicians and finding out things about them when they are working on new projects! He’s a guy with a sense of humor and there was much laughter throughout the show.

Frank asked Kevin how he could get a book deal and Kevin said you have to come up with a proposal and then pick out the publisher that publishes the kinds of books that you like to read. He said that they publish music books. Frank said that if you goggle Frank Moore and punk clubs Frank comes up. Kevin loved hearing about the Outrageous Beauty Review at Mabuhay Gardens, about how Frank auditioned people and could not find people who were outrageous enough so he put plants in the show and people had to be more outrageous than the plants but nobody knew who the plants were. The first show there were prizes for everyone including everyone in the audience. Frank had gone around in his wheelchair and collected gifts and gift certificates from all the local stores and shops. He would come home with this backpack filled. Frank wanted a band that was raw and not polished so they auditioned musicians, most of whom said they couldn’t do it or they lasted a week or two, so they decided to pick up instruments and do it themselves. When a song got too polished they would start learning a new one. Although the show wasn’t punk they were part of the fabric of the punk scene and all the punk musicians knew them since the Outrageous Beauty Review was the opening act at Mabuhay Gardens for three years. Kevin said he had been around then and wished he had come to the show. Kevin was also going to UC Berkeley the first time that Frank did a series of performances there but wasn’t sure he had seen it. When the UC series started the campus police showed up and there was Frank laying on a table naked. The campus police went to the professor who had sponsored the show and he told them that he was Frank’s sponsored and that Frank could do anything that he wanted!

Kevin really enjoyed hearing about how Frank listened to Radio Luxemburg when he was a kid living in Germany when his dad was in the service. Frank and Linda told Kevin the story about how luver started. How Frank was doing a show on another internet radio station and they were all into freedom of speech. It turned out they were only into being able to say a few words on-air but did not like it when Frank started reading emails about there policies live on the air. They told Frank that he had to sell out and that why didn’t he start his own internet radio station. So Mikee figured out how to do it and they had a once a week show, The Shaman’s Den. A guy from Tokyo was the first show on luver and he would play amazing live music on-air with different musicians. Then one night they got a message in the chat asking why did they always shut off lunver at night just when this person was listening, so it grew into 24/7 programming!

Frank asked Kevin if he would like to do a show on Luver and he said he would love to. He had always wanted to do a radio show and he had an office full of cds. Then Frank told him the story of how John Sinclair of the MC5 had handed over his entire music collection off his computer to luver one of the times he was on the show. Then Kevin said well maybe his music collection wasn’t quite what he thought it was and he would have to rethink it. Luver had just gotten Pat Boon and Hank Williams III’s cds in the mail. Before luver it seemed like there was no good music anymore but it turned out they just weren’t playing on the radio because amazing cds come in the mail to luver all the time!

Frank told Kevin to send them more books and for nobody to say anything about the Dick Tracy logo that Jawbone Press has on their website. Kevin said yes it looked just like Dick Tracy and he had been worried about it but nobody in England seemed to worry about it so there it is! It’s amazing all the different people who come on the Shaman’s Den!

* * * * *

That’s how I remember it.
Best,
Kevin

* * * * *
you have a good memory!

Got the box of books! You don’t publish fluff, but meaty histories about what we care about!

Next Sunday Richie is coming to talk about the Velvet Underground!

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

Shaman’s Den: Tracy of Media Alliance

hey, Tracy! It was a great show last night. We got this below email about it.

We forgot last night to arrange how to get your show to play on LUVER. We can play it from a dvd.
Does that work for you?

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

* * * * *
Last nights guest on The Shaman’s Den was Tracy Rosenberg from Media Alliance. It was a great show about what is currently happening with big media, public access and particularly BTV. It is such important information to get out there. It was great to get the information out about how much BTV has changed in the last year and a half. Frank and Linda talked about how the entire feeling of what BTV has changed. They are no longer showing as much local, raw, intimate programming. Now they are showing canned programs that are not local. Tracy talked about how when programs are not local they loose the magic that comes out of people creating something within their community. The programming on BTV is now looking mainstream, smooth, and polished. They have now replaced Frank’s shows with old cooking shows from Colorado which means that instead of having local bands on the air they have out of state cooking shows! Wow! Linda talked about a show that use to be on that was a heavy metal cooking show, a local show where heavy metal guys where on with their girlfriends and they were cooking. They would cook things that looked really good and it was a really sweet show. Now shows like that are gone. Linda talked about how BTV is no longer user friendly. They have made new rules that make it harder for local people to put programming on the air. Now you have to be a member and pay a fee in order to have something on BTV and you don’t have to be a local person to sponsor a show. They made up a new rule that a person cannot host more than one show in a day. That rule right there knocked much of Frank’s programming off the air! Whatever image they are trying to put out there they are blinded to what was happening before within the community, people connecting with each other. Linda talked about how many people would come up to Frank when he was on the campaign trail. They all knew Frank because they were watching his shows!

Frank talked about how he has tried to have conversations with the new people who are running BTV to ask them why they have made the changes they have made. He sent them letters to ask why they have the new policies that they have. He has even invited them on his show to discuss it. They have not been responsive and are not interested in engaging. Tracy said that they should come on the show and they should be willing to talk about why they are making the decisions that they are making. Frank and Linda talked about how they don’t know what to ask them at this point. The changes have been so drastic that it has been hard for them to watch the changes that have happened like Frank’s shows being replaced by old cooking shows from Colorado! Frank said that there should be enough local stuff to fill the space, don’t kick him off for canned stuff! Frank and Linda told Tracy about how Frank use to have six hours of programming on a night. Before that they just had the daily announcement calendar on from midnight to 6:00 AM so that Frank suggested that he could fill the space with the hundreds of programs that he had. At the time the director of BCM said great and that’s the way it was for years!

There was so much important information that came out in this show about the media. Tracy talked about the laws that they are working on in Washington to legalize pirate radio. Frank said that before it gets passed they will probably crack down and go around and shut down a bunch more pirate radio stations. With digital channels there are now more channels on tv and on the radio but the big cable companies like Comcast who lease out BTV to the Berkeley Unified School District and to the city of Berkeley, who own the channels are not going to donate any more of their channels for community use. Tracy said that they are only going to donate the minimum that they are required to by law. Tracy talked about how ATT throws big parties in Sacramento and in other states to get what they want. They are trying to become the monopoly and they are the monopoly in 26 states including California. This way the cable companies do not have to contract with each city but have a big monopoly in the entire state. Linda said that every month the cable bill goes up by 25 or 50 cents and Tracy said they are making a killing! Big media does not like public access because they do not like what they cannot control, what they can’t make money off of. In LA public access is almost dead, almost gone when there used to be 12-14 stations. There are laws that people are working on that would roll back the laws and provide public access with the funding they were receiving in 2005. There would be less restrictions on how they can spend their money. Now much of the funding can only be used for equipment and not for hiring people to train people to use the equipment. Frank talked about how media equipment is now easier to use, more people friendly. So, that in a time when it is even easier for people to create things the media makes it harder for people to get it out there into the community. Linda talked about how people are often attracted to an image of doing something that is going to reach a lot of people rather than listening to how easy it is to do your own show and get it out there without money and without focusing on how many people you are reaching. Tracy said that at least Frank is still kicking away and doing his 2 1/2 hour show and that she did not know of another station that allows people to play shows that are that long in length. Tracy said that she would take Frank’s slot when he retires and Frank said that he is not going to be retiring anytime soon! He said that he is good at grabbing opportunities. He said that most people aren’t good at grabbing opportunities.

Frank and Linda told the story about when the city council tried to change Frank’s programs to 2:00 AM and how they backed down when channel 7 showed up and supporters showed up and Frank kept writing letters to the newspaper. It was front paged news. There was only one city council member who was for not changing the time of Frank’s shows. Then it failed and the whole thing was dropped when the ACLU came in. The City Council was trying to come up with laws for Frank’s shows that were different than the ones on a national level. Linda told the story about how Luver got started. They were doing the Shaman’s Den on another web station who said that Frank had to sell out. It turned out they were talking about selling out for only a few dollars! Frank said that Luver could play the show that Tracy is airing in San Francisco and she said great! They have 10 episodes already and Frank said that is 10 weeks worth! Tracy had heard that Frank had run for president and Linda read her his policies on public access media and she said that nobody who ever ran for president had such a great policy on the media. From Frank’s platform: “Each city and each “media market” will have at least two public access channels on radio, broadcast television, cable, AND satellite! These channels will be free and open forums for discussion of the issues. Moreover, starting 2 months before an election, every radio and television station will give each candidate 5 hours of free prime time.” Linda told the story of how Frank ran for president, how it all started as a T-shirt. It was a present for Frank. Then when Frank would wear the T-shirt people started asking what his platform was, so he wrote one and it took off from there. Lately people have been asking if Frank would be running in the next election! They are getting excited about it again now that they see that not much is changing with Obama.

Tracy talked about how we watch public access for the intimate feeling of it, its about neighbors talking to neighbors that the idea behind it. Frank said that that is what he is trying to tell BTV so he said to call them and tell them that you want local programming! Tracy said that it has been a great show and that she will be watching luver! Tracy said that Media Alliance where she works is an activist organization that fights for 1st amendment freedom of speech, alternative voices, independent media. Media Alliance introduces people to media skills so they can get there message/story out. This show did that in a very powerful and important way!

Fw: ampb report #93

tomorrow I am doing a special show with Media alliance. Hopefully we will cover some of these issues. But maybe not, because they seem to be more mainstream.

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

* * * * *

Dear Readers,

Every now and then the authorities get excited and go out and start some enforcement activities. We don’t know if it’s caused by moon phases or solar flares, but probably they are just doing the bidding of their bosses. Right now we seem to be in one of those “heightened enforcement” periods. Stories about the fines against Pirate Cat Radio and Radio Free Brooklyn follow. All I can say is watch out for these FCC guys and whatever you do, don’t let them in to “inspect your facility”. If they’re in your area, a good strategy may be to go quiet until they go away. Changing location also seems to work as a stall tactic. Most enforcement seems to be generated by complaints, so try not to make people want to complain about you. Send out a clean signal and don’t interfere with licensed stations. The movie formerly known as “The Boat That Rocked” has finally made it to the US in a shortened form and retitled “Pirate Radio”. We hope it inspires people to join in the fun. Anyway, enjoy any slack time that comes your way and remember that shortwave stations like to crank it up during the holidays so tune in to the area just below 7 megahertz and see what you can hear!
-Paul Griffin (for the AMPB)

HUGE BLOW IN WAR AGAINST CORPORATE DOMINATION OF THE AIRWAVES; PIRATES TAKE A HIT.
San Francisco, CA, 10/31/2009 — Pirate Cat Radio, a volunteer-run, community broadcasting organization operating out of the Pirate Cat Café in San Francisco’s Mission district, has ceased its terrestrial broadcast on 87.9FM in response to the latest demands of the Federal Communications Commission. In a notice dated August 31, 2009 the FCC asserted that Monkey, the founder of Pirate Cat Radio, “willfully and repeatedly violated Section 301 of the Communications Act of 1934” and proposed to fine him $10,000 for the infraction. By bringing to bear the full weight of the Federal government against continued broadcast operations, the FCC’s order effectively ends Pirate Cat Radio’s thirteen-year run as one of the Bay Area’s most consistent voices of protest against corporate-run media monopolies and monocultural programming. The FCC was established by the Communications Act of 1934, and was given the responsibility of making a “fair, efficient and equitable distribution of radio service”, and to ensure that broadcasters serve the ‘public interest’. It is hard to understand how fining the founder of Pirate Cat Radio, an entirely volunteer run community station, and effectively taking them off the air after 13 years, is an appropriate action and in the public’s interest There have never been any complaints over PCRs content. Pirate Cat Radio provides an important community service one that has been recognized by the Board of Supervisors in a certificate of honor. They are one of the best sources of news and regularly broadcast Al Jazeera and BBC bulletins. The news is read in every 2-hour DJ slot. They make regular valuable PSAs and publicize local events. They take an active approach to involving the community, by bringing local unsung heroes and talents into the studio. Pirate Cat Radio provides a voice and outlet for many sections of the community of the Bay Area which cannot make themselves heard anywhere else. If the public’s interests are to be served then ‘ordinary’ people must be allowed to make their voice heard and to be allowed to express themselves creatively without regard for commercial success. The FCC’s policy instead seems to be protecting the airwaves for the big corporations to pump out their bland, homogenized wasteland offering dull limited playlists, banal chat and censored opinions. Until this happens people must continue to challenge the corporate domination of the airwaves. Looking to the future, PCR can continue as an internet only station and the café/studio on 21st st will continue to operate, but at least for the time being, but it cannot safely broadcast over the terrestrial FM band without possibly jeopardizing its volunteers and supporters. How this will affect the service is not clear yet, although it is true that the majority of their listeners are now online or downloading podcasts. “Obviously this is a major disappointment,” says Monkey, “But we made a collective decision that Pirate Cat Radio must come off the public airwaves, until some method is found to change the law or get it authorized under existing law.”

For additional information:
Monkey
Pirate Cat Radio
415-571-1911
monkey@piratecatradio.com

Radio Free Brooklyn Gets Slapped

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has levied a $10,000 fine against two Flatbush “schlock jocks” who were operating a pirate radio station out of their own apartment. FCC officials said that Jean Clerveau and Jocelyn Edwards were “providing services and facilities incidental to the operation of an unlicensed radio transmitter when they were caught playing their tunes on 90.5 FM. FCC agents uncovered the radio station when they were investigating a complaint of radio interference on East 19th Street back in March 2008. The agent not only followed the signal back to their second-floor apartment, but reportedly found an antenna on the top of the roof, according to an FCC spokesman. The building manager told them that the apartment in question belonged to Clerveau and Edwards, but the couple denied running a radio station out of their pad. Officials admitted that when they finally caught Clerveau at home, they could not find any radio equipment on the premises although the inspection took place after the FCC had sent the couple a letter and had made several attempts to visit the home. Clerveau and Edwards claimed that the unlicensed radio station was actually transmitting from across the street but could not provide any evidence, officials said. Nor could the FCC, who imposed the fine “absent of any other evidence that their agents were mistaken.”
Two times the charm.

AMPB LINKS ON THE WEB:

A list of FCC actions going back to 2003
http://www.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/

Thirty Reasons Why Fox News is not Legit
http://mediamatters.org/columns/200910270002

Eight years later, people still want to know what happened.
http://www.911blogger.com

Turn any youtube video into mp3 audio.
http://www.dirpy.com

Capture that youtube video before it goes away.
http://www.kissyoutube.com

Lots of interesting online stations here.
http://radio.indymedia.org

Got a podcast? Upload it here.
http://www.radio4all.net

Can you believe the government?
http://www.prisonplanet.com

Find out what the major media companies own.
http://www.cjr.org/resources/index.php

The Pirate Radio Hall of Fame
http://www.offshoreradio.co.uk

What’s a wobblie?
http://www.iww.org

When the pirates took over radio
http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/11/12/pirate.radio.history/index.html

cutting shows

Dear Friends,
I write to you this afternoon with a story that many of you may already be familiar with, yet I feel it important enough that those of you who are not already in the loop of the recent programming changes at KPFA, where for the past 14 years I have been one of 5 daily programmers producing a diverse and wide ranging 2 hour weekly “Music of the World” radio show, become aware of a recent and significant cut in Music programming at the station.

So, for your information, I bear the news that, for reasons not entirely clear to anybody but certainly dressed up as necessary changes due to an extreme financial crisis at KPFA (Pacifica Radio’s flagship station and the oldest Public Listener-Sponsored Radio Station in the world) management at KPFA took the drastic step of reducing Music of the World by 60% from being a Week-Daily 2 hour show from 10am-Noon, to a 1 hour show (11-Noon) on only 4 days. The beneficiary of this cut in Music at the station is a daily 1 hour show, Letters to Washington which, as the name suggests, concerns itself with the politics of the moment – not unlike many other Talk Radio programs that festoon the public airwaves in every direction.

Though this obviously effects me personally, as one of the programmers directly affected by this sudden change in direction at KPFA which, almost unannounced, brought about this sea change in their programming structure on November 2nd 2009, I am more concerned that it demonstrates a clear lack of commitment to the importance of keeping Music and The Arts as an essential ingredient in terrestrial radio. Without going into too much rationalization or analysis of this move, I am concerned that this particular change in the daily schedule at KPFA is the precursor to further cuts – I can’t see a single 1 hour Music broadcast Mon, Wed, Thur, Fri in a day that is otherwise completely dominated by wall to wall talk radio programming from pre-dawn (6am) until long after dark (8pm) being a priority in the minds of those who make the programming policy at KPFA.

So this email is by way of an announcement to you that this is happening at this time honored Listener-Sponsored institution, in case you haven’t noticed.

If this in any way raises questions for you or you have yourself an opinion about it that you would like to air then KPFA’s listener comment line is (510) 848 6767 ext. 3 or you can write to the station through their web site:

www.KPFA.org/contact

In the meantime I will endeavor to continue to cram as much positive energy as is humanly possibly into a one hour (actually 56 minutes) time slot on Thursdays in my own version of Music of the World

Thanks for Listening

Stay Tuned

Stephen

Stephen Kent
stephen@stephenkent.net
www.stephenkent.net

Producer of “Music of the World”
KPFA 94.1FM Thursdays
www.KPFA.org

* * * * *

ah, yes, Stephen! I know well how it feels to be “trimmed.” I just was trimmed on B-TV in favor of canned non- local old shows. What is happening is everything is being tied to the mainstream frame.
Subjects of talk radio are limited to that frame, whether it’s “progressive” or “right- wing.” things that aren’t limited by that frame aren’t valued. Things like People’s music, art, culture, philosophy, etc. aren’t seen as important expressions. So they are not covered under the marketing tool of “free speech radio!”

funny… As I’m writing this, I’m listening to your show on LUVER!

In Freedom,
Frank Moore

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