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Messages - Pigmeat

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451
I remember Tony Adams and his hunger strike in that H-Block prison. The Brits thought he would eat when he got hungry enough. They were wrong. It's men like Tony that brought Derry to where it is today, nearly free of the English.

452
Same here on a PA. Kiwi w/ an active antenna. Nice audio. Playing Talking Heads from way back when. 0:23 into "Smack My Bitch Up".

453
Listening to a Kiwi in Dayton, OH while the Deal twins peel me grapes w/ their toes. S-7 to S-9 signal, but the static is horrible. The Miami tribe always said the area around what's now Dayton, especially Xenia, was cursed and told settlers not to build there.

Xenia has been flattened by tornado's twice in my lifetime. I'd move to Indiana.

454
St. John's has always scheduled teams they thought they'd have trouble with in that shoebox sized on-campus arena. I would expect that tradition to continue with Little Ricky.

One of my favorite memories of the Big East Tournament was Pitino bringing his Louisville team to town the year he got caught doing the nasty on a table his girlfriend after hours at his Lexington, KY. restaurant. The fans chanted her name for most of the game.

Never leave UK, take the Louisville job a few years later, then head back to Lexington to boink your mistress on the side. Most of his employee's were die-hard UK fans. Did he think he was so beloved in Lexington the media wasn't going to hear about it? All that gel and dye he put on his hair must have ate most of his brain cells? The Louisville-UK rivalry is a bitter one, especially in basketball. Even that old Louisville alum, Mitch McConnell, couldn't keep Pitino's misdeeds out of the news. 

455
Uh-oh. Now they're going to be pestering you for qsl's all the time, Outhouse. Better keep the makings of the "Purple Drank" close at hand, you're going to need it.

456
I was watching the UConn-Gonzaga basketball game last night and listening to the play-by-play on WFAN. Gonzaga got thumped, but the WFAN announcers weren't cutting them a bit of slack on calls that could have gone both ways. I'm guessing WFAN was carrying the UConn crew since NYC and CT. are rock throwing distance apart?

457
General Radio Discussion / Re: YHWH - 1/25 update
« on: March 26, 2023, 0550 UTC »
It looks like some pics You Know Who sent me of his earthly abode before he moved to Shady Acres. You Know Who used to spend a lot of time in the Mojave as a boy. It makes me wonder if they're related?

458
S9@ My QTH
2111 My Cosmos in Mine - Depeche Mode


2114 ID as Radio Free

A beagle! Better than any alarm system you can buy. They'll bark loudly at anyone or anything that comes around. You and your neighbors can sleep soundly with the bellow of a beagle to alert you to danger, or just rain hitting the roof of the doghouse in the middle of the night. You and that dog must be the talk of the neighborhood this time of year when the possums, the infernal nocturnal beasts, are emerging after a long winter nap.

459
There is a Kiwi SDR on the island of Sardinia, the only one on the island, that you can hear Indy well on. Go to the Kiwi site in the HFU Wiki and check out the map. It's an easy way to confirm what you're hearing.

BTW, remote SDR's are great method to find out where your signal is getting to. With a long tx you can track it as it progresses. Indy runs 15 watts. If remote SDR's would've been common place when I was carpeting the planet with 14 watts, I wouldn't have wrote the people in Europe and on the West Coast off as being full of it.

460
15 mighty watts of hi-fi AM. Nice catch.

461
Steel Pulse was one of my favorite dub style Reggae outfits back in the day. You guy's don't have "Vampire" do you? I used to play it on Radio Al Fansome years ago.

You know, to my Scot's MIL, "BOG" meant that little house at the Back Of the Garden? Don't tell Outhouse.

462
You can hear WLW from the Mississippi River to the Appalachian foothills during the day year round. I used to love to listen to Gary Burbank and his crew year round on that long drive. For a while they had "Mojo Nixon's House Party" after 10 pm. EST. He'd keep you from falling asleep at the wheel. Red's baseball tends make you nod off during the warm months.

KMOX has about the same range to the east. I don't have any idea how far they reach out on the Great Plains? Far enough to steal market share from the Royal's would be my guess.

463
QSLs Received / Re: AD149 Radio eQSL
« on: March 24, 2023, 2255 UTC »
Of course they'll send one to you, Shortwave. They broadcast from South American Bigfoot Land, you live in North American Bigfoot Land.

464
"Daydream Believer". That old Monkees song ought to get You Know Who to cut the crap with the solar flares, although it might tick him off as it could remind him that he couldn't have been a homecoming Queen in his HS days on Earth.

465
General Radio Discussion / Re: Balls
« on: March 23, 2023, 0128 UTC »
FCC Fines 15 Year-Old Pirate Radio Station in NYC $2 Million

Motherboard
By Matthew Gault
22 March 2023,

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is using a new law to fine a pirate radio station operating in New York City for more than $2 million. For 15 years, Impacto 2, which has been operated by two brothers, has broadcast Ecuadorian news, culture, sports, and talk-radio on 105.5 FM in Queens. The feds have tried to shut it down repeatedly, but have never succeeded.

The FCC announced the fine in a press release last week. “The Commission proposed the maximum penalty allowable, $2,316,034, against brothers César Ayora and Luis Angel Ayora for pirate radio broadcasting in Queens, New York,” the release said. The FCC also said it was trying to seize $80,000 in equipment from a man broadcasting pirate radio in Eastern Oregon.

The Ayoras have been on the FCC’s radar since 2008 when they started broadcasting Impacto 2 for the Ecuadorian community in Queens: "The brothers César and [Luis] Angel Ayora in September 2008 founded the first Ecuadorian FM radio station in New York City. . . The station never sleeps, because a team of communication professionals are working for you 24 hours a day," their website, which is currently down, said. The station is broadcast over the internet and has moved around the FM spectrum several times over the years.

The station's Instagram and Facebook pages show that they regularly throw events for the community and that their main mission is providing Spanish-language news and music for Ecuadorians living in Queens.

The FCC closely polices radio spectrums around the country, and provides licenses to companies who apply for specific frequencies. On the one hand, this makes sense, because use of radio frequencies are limited by physics and, without licenses, radio would be a free-for-all. Currently, the FCC is not providing any new FM or AM radio frequencies, according to its website. At the same time, pirate radio has a long history of providing access to the airwaves for independent broadcasters. In this case, the targets of the fine are a pair of brothers who were providing a vital community resource.

In court documents about the fine, the FCC detailed its history with the Ayoras and Impacto 2.

The story is always the same. Someone complains about the Ecuadorian broadcast, the FCC investigates and tracks down the radio antenna, and the Ayoras admit to owning it. Then the FCC issues a fine. “On June 2, 2015, the Bureau issued a $20,000 forfeiture order against Luis Angel Ayora for operating this unauthorized radio station,” court document said “The Bureau received no response to the order, and the forfeiture was never paid.”

After the fine goes unpaid, the FCC seizes the equipment. But the Ayoras don’t stop. “The seizure of their equipment by federal agents did not deter the Ayoras from continuing to operate their pirate radio station,” a court document said.

According to the FCC’s court documents, the Ayoras repeatedly talked about the pirate station on the air and let the audience know when the station changed places on the FM dial. César Ayora even hosts a show called Sentimientos where he plays romantic music every Sunday night. The radio station’s Instagram account explicitly advertises it as airing in New York.

The brothers even kept the pirate radio stations running during the pandemic. The feds noticed but held off on investigating. “COVID-19 travel restrictions prevented further onsite inspections until 2022,” the court record said.

Things changed in 2020, when Congress passed the Preventing Illegal Radio Abuse Through Enforcement (PIRATE) Act. The PIRATE act gave the FCC broader powers to levy fines and seize equipment against accused broadcasters including a penalty of $100,000 a day with a maximum fine of $2 million. “In addition to tougher fines on violators, the law requires the FCC to conduct periodic enforcement sweeps and grants the Commission authority to take enforcement action against landlords and property owners that willfully and knowingly permit pirate radio broadcasting on their properties,” the FCC said in a press release.

According to the FCC, the Ayoras have admitted to operating the radio station several times during interviews. The feds even went to the trouble of totaling every day it could prove the pair had run the radio station and detailed what it would like to charge them for it. “Based on the severity of the facts underlying these factors, we propose the maximum penalty of $115,80265 for each day of the 184 days during which the Ayoras operated their pirate radio station in 2022 for a total penalty of $21,307,568,” the FCC’s court documents said.

That is, however, not possible under the new PIRATE Act. “We reduce the proposed penalty from $21,307,568 to $2,316,034 based on the statutory limits imposed by section 511(a) of the Act,” it said in court documents.

All of this said, the FCC may have trouble finding the Ayoras. On February 19, a month before the FCC announced the fine, Luis Angel Ayora posted a picture of himself on Facebook in front of a lush green mountain. “The person who guesses the location gets a guinea pig,” he said in the caption.

Impacto 2 did not immediately respond to Motherboard’s request for comment.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/93k535/fcc-fines-15-year-old-nyc-pirate-radio-station-dollar2-million

Gonna send some cuy, eh?

BTW, Ecuador has no extradition agreements w/ the USA, no matter where the offender hails from. Two Ecuadorans, back home, with a country to the north, Colombia, where it's perfectly legal to counterfeit US currency, while Ecuador has used nothing but the dollar as it's official currency since the turn of the century? My senses tell me there's a lot of funny money floating around down there? Good luck on getting those two to pay up.

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