I thought making the move from record albums to cassette tapes was a big leap--still remember my hours spent after school lovingly transferring
Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, all of Bill Cosby's albums, and Escape Club's "Wild Wild West" over to the new format... Now we have podcasts, mp3s, YouTube--
light years ahead. Though, surprisingly, vinyl has made a comeback in recent years thanks to your more discriminating music lovers, who enjoy the richer sound.
Radio has survived, but sadly the "morning zoo" format is dying. Whacky deejays playing call-in trivia games, pulling outrageous stunts, and doing silly voices is old-hat, it seems. I recall one show years ago out of Memphis that had "Barney The Security Guard" (a pretty spot-on Don Knotts impersonator) drop in form time to time with some dumb scheme, like marketing collapsible Christmas trees that fit right in your pocket, or selling Earth Day pamphlets (the gag being that he would flush all unsold ones down the toilet). One of my favorites was the time he showed his vacation slides on the air. Ridiculous for that format, right? In 1989, yes. But 35 years later, in the era of webcams and streaming video, suddenly not so silly.
Man, I've got to go into storage and hunt up my old tapes--these kids today should know that long before
Jackass we had premiere FM radio stuntman
Danger Boy.