Thanks for the explanation, ff. I didn't think it could be that simple!
'Classic FM-ification'
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Don Petter
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostOr indeed ANY facebook page.
from serious issues.
like the quality of public services.
or the latest government lie.
That is the point.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostOr indeed ANY facebook page.
On balance I'd say it was a PLUS.
(And one gains an interesting insight into the R3 world as presented to what RW believes is the "new" market. Unfortunately the "new" market seems little interested and a lot of responses from posters could be classed as "questioning". The latest (a Czech speaker) takes Katie Dereham to task for pronouncing "Stabat" of Dvorak's "Stabat Mater" as "Shtabbat". It's Latin, he says, and even in Czech it's not pronounced "Shtabbat".)O Wort, du Wort, das mir Fehlt!
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I could just about be convinced that there is some value to Twitter, mainly due to the immediacy of the information it conveys, but I fail to see any redeeming features in Facebook or why anyone would think it representative of the "new market" Radio 3 allegedly seeks; it's nothing but flypaper for the technically naïve.
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Originally posted by Bax-of-Delights View PostWell, it all depends on how one manages it. Unmediated it can be just a torrent of inconsequential and plainly silly witterings (which is one of the reasons I now no longer use the Twitter) but with judicious choices it can open up areas of fascinating connections. For example my own Facebook page has links to certain authors (that's my business) and a number of music related pages (the Peter Warlock page for example which shows photographs and essays not readily available in a casual internet search). Through it I have made re-connections with old chums long thought lost on the other side of the world.
On balance I'd say it was a PLUS.
B-o-D, your page sounds very interesting. Do I have to be a 'friend' to access it?
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Originally posted by James Wonnacott View PostWhat, exactly, is the point of Facebook?[...]
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Norfolk Born
Originally posted by Bax-of-Delights View PostWell, it all depends on how one manages it. Unmediated it can be just a torrent of inconsequential and plainly silly witterings (which is one of the reasons I now no longer use the Twitter) but with judicious choices it can open up areas of fascinating connections. For example my own Facebook page has links to certain authors (that's my business) and a number of music related pages (the Peter Warlock page for example which shows photographs and essays not readily available in a casual internet search). Through it I have made re-connections with old chums long thought lost on the other side of the world.
On balance I'd say it was a PLUS.
(And one gains an interesting insight into the R3 world as presented to what RW believes is the "new" market. Unfortunately the "new" market seems little interested and a lot of responses from posters could be classed as "questioning". The latest (a Czech speaker) takes Katie Dereham to task for pronouncing "Stabat" of Dvorak's "Stabat Mater" as "Shtabbat". It's Latin, he says, and even in Czech it's not pronounced "Shtabbat".)
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Norfolk Born
Originally posted by old khayyam View PostHere's a big clue as to what we are being force-fed:
The relevant line being halfway down the History paragraph: "The station took as its model New York's WNYC and WGMS in Washington, D.C., with their more populist mix of talk, light classical music, new artists and crossover classical records
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Norfolk Born
..or indeed of any other composer. In case RW has forgotten, the second 'B' in 'BBC' stands for Broadcasting, which this clearly isn't.
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