I remember my mother following stories on the radio but she never got THAT engaged in the stories.
Now, go burn his other shirts, Mrs. Mutt!!
I prefer playing records the rare times I iron. Then I have to change them to time my task.
The “Good Ol’ Days.”
I remember The Cisco Kid and Boston Blacky and Thunderbolt the Wonder Colt.
My wife watches TV while she does games on her iPad. She wears TV ears so I don’t have to listen, but not watching the TV she is effectively listening to radio. She also listens around the house, in the kitchen, the bedroom, cleaning.
Yours Truly Johnny Dollar, Richard Diamond, Private Detective, The Adventures of Sam Spade. Those were some of my favorites.
Go bowling, Mutt! Then tell her, “When I asked you for your permission, m’love, I naturally took your silence for a ‘Yes.’”
That’s pretty good, pretty clever. Back in the 1940s or maybe 1930s when radio soaps were very prevalent.
wiatr over 3 years ago
I remember my mother following stories on the radio but she never got THAT engaged in the stories.
Susan00100 over 3 years ago
Now, go burn his other shirts, Mrs. Mutt!!
VegaAlopex over 3 years ago
I prefer playing records the rare times I iron. Then I have to change them to time my task.
e.groves over 3 years ago
The “Good Ol’ Days.”
Huckleberry Hiroshima over 3 years ago
I remember The Cisco Kid and Boston Blacky and Thunderbolt the Wonder Colt.
donwestonmysteries over 3 years ago
My wife watches TV while she does games on her iPad. She wears TV ears so I don’t have to listen, but not watching the TV she is effectively listening to radio. She also listens around the house, in the kitchen, the bedroom, cleaning.
The Pro from Dover over 3 years ago
Yours Truly Johnny Dollar, Richard Diamond, Private Detective, The Adventures of Sam Spade. Those were some of my favorites.
paullp Premium Member over 3 years ago
Go bowling, Mutt! Then tell her, “When I asked you for your permission, m’love, I naturally took your silence for a ‘Yes.’”
brklnbern over 3 years ago
That’s pretty good, pretty clever. Back in the 1940s or maybe 1930s when radio soaps were very prevalent.