WKRP in Cincinnati and Yahoo Music Jukebox: Difference between pages

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'''Yahoo Music Engine''' is a free music player released by [[Yahoo]] in [[2005]]. The features are currently complete, although the player is still considered to be in the [[Development stage|Beta stage]] due to minor, miscellaneous glitches. Its appearance is somewhat similar to the ''[[MusicMatch Jukebox]]''. This may be related to the fact that MusicMatch, which developed the Jukebox, was purchased by Yahoo in 2004.
'''''WKRP in Cincinnati''''' ([[1978 in television|1978]]–[[1982 in television|1982]]) was an American [[situation comedy]] that featured the misadventures of the staff of a struggling [[radio station]] in [[Cincinnati, Ohio|Cincinnati]], [[Ohio]]. It premiered [[September 18]], 1978 on [[CBS]] and featured [[Gary Sandy]], [[Howard Hesseman]], [[Gordon Jump]], [[Loni Anderson]], [[Tim Reid]], [[Jan Smithers]], [[Richard Sanders]], and [[Frank Bonner]]. The series won a [[Humanitas Prize]] and received three [[Emmy Award]] nominations during the early [[1980s]]. The humor came more from [[running gag]]s based on the known predilections and quirks of each character, rather than from outlandish plots or racy situations.
 
Its features include CD [[ripping]] and [[CD/DVD authoring|burning]], access to [[Launcast]] and [[Yahoo Unlimited]], playlist creation, transfer of music to portable devices such as [[digital audio player|mp3 players]] and [[USB flash drive]]s. Also the program allows [[Yahoo Messenger]] users to [[streaming media|stream]] music to one another (not to be confused with [[uploading and downloading]] or [[filesharing]]) and browse one another's playlists. Only those subscribed to Yahoo Ultimate are entitled to entire songs, however. Non-subscribers are limited to a thirty second sample.
Jump, Sanders, and Bonner reprised their supporting roles in a [[spinoff (television)|spinoff]]/[[sequel]] series, ''[[The New WKRP in Cincinnati]]'', which ran from [[1991 in television|1991]] to [[1993 in television|1993]].
 
One can rip songs in a variety of formats including [[WAV|.wav]], [[MP3|.mp3]], and [[WMV|.wmv]]. Interestingly, one cannot rip songs in the [[WMA|.wma]] format, despite the fact that songs purchased from Yahoo are encoded using that format.
==Story and characters==
 
The Engine also has a great deal of [[plugin]]s, which reside on the program's official website below.
:{{spoiler}}
 
==External links==
The series begins as Andy Travis (Gary Sandy) comes to the station as the new programming director, hired to improve the dismal ratings of the [[beautiful music]] station, run by weak-willed [[Arthur Carlson]] (Gordon Jump). Travis changes the programming format to [[rock music]], but WKRP's ratings fail to improve significantly in the fictional Cincinnati market it inhabits, mostly because of his unwillingness to fire the existing personnel when he takes over; their idiosyncrasies are more to blame for the station's fortunes than its format.
*[http://music.yahoo.com/musicengine Yahoo! Music Engine Official Site]
*[http://plugins.yme.music.yahoo.com Yahoo! Music Engine Plug-ings]
 
[[Category:CBSWindows networkmedia showsplayers]]
The best-known episode is the first season's "Turkeys Away", named by ''[[TV Guide]]'' as one of the greatest episodes in TV history. It relates a disastrous [[Thanksgiving]] promotion, which includes Carlson dropping live [[turkey]]s out of a [[helicopter]]. The scene is reported live on the air by the station's news director, Les Nessman (Richard Sanders), breathlessly describing the unseen birds plummeting to the ground, in the same manner as [[Herbert Morrison (announcer)|Herbert Morrison]]'s coverage of the [[Hindenburg disaster]], including his memorable line "Oh! The humanity!" Afterwards, the stunned and bedraggled Carlson explains, "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly."
 
* For the most part, the character of Andy Travis serves as [[straight man]] or sane observer to the eccentric staff of the station he has been hired to run. He is a seemingly qualified professional, but is overpowered by the personalities of his staff.
 
* Arthur Carlson, aka "the Big Guy" is the station manager, whose main qualification is that his tycoon mother is the owner. His bumbling, indecisive management is one of the main reasons the station is unsuccessful. Carlson's mother confronts Travis about changing the station to a rock and roll format, but relents when her son uncharacteristically gets the courage to defend the decision.
 
* [[Dr. Johnny Fever]], a burned-out veteran of the radio industry, is usually in one sort of trouble or another. For instance, he was fired from one major station when he inadvertently said "booger" on the air. In one episode, he tells his (supposedly few) listeners to dump their trash at city hall, and goes into shock when the trash heap turns out to be huge! He loses his voice and withdraws before finally finding the strength to confront his larger-than-he-imagined audience and tells them to stop the trashing of city hall. The show's theme song would seem to be about the much-traveled Johnny.
 
* News reporter [[Les Nessman]] approaches his job with absurd seriousness, despite the fact that he is almost completely incompetent. Les is forever working to obtain the fictional Cincinnati radio news industry trophy "the Buckeye Newshawk Award", though he had already won it in previous years. Before approaching his desk, one has to "knock" on the nonexistent door, attached to the nonexistent walls of the nonexistent office he feels he deserves; those who don't face his ineffectual wrath. He is always wearing a bandage somewhere on his body (a running gag begun when Sanders showed up for filming wearing one). Johnny takes delight in ribbing Les on the air, sometimes closing his own segment with the announcement, "And now, more news and ''less Nessman!''" Les occasionally has to read sports news, a subject he knows little about; reading a piece about golfer [[Chi Chi Rodriguez]], he pronounces the name "Chy Chy ''Rod''-ri-gweez".
 
* [[Jennifer Marlowe]], the beautiful blonde secretary, is the station's highest-paid employee. She is informed, cool, and composed at all times. Although very aware of her sexual attractiveness with various important men at her beck and call, she is friendly and good-hearted with the station staff. Her apartment's doorbell chime, instead of the standard "ding dong", plays the opening bars of "Fly Me to the Moon" in dignified tones. One time Carlson tries vainly to lift the spirits of his staff, saying, "Nobody's perfect! I'm not perfect... You're not perfect... Jennifer probably is!"
 
* [[Herb Tarlek]], the advertising account executive, wears loud plaid suits (which he thinks convey the message "Trust me — sign my deal!") and can't sell the big accounts, succeeding only in selling commercials for trivial products such as "Red Wigglers — the [[Cadillac (automobile)|Cadillac]] of worms!" (Available at finer worm stores everywhere). Another sponsor is a funeral parlor called "Ferryman's", whose staff sing a cheery-sounding jingle with lyrics, "There's no use, you can't deny it / One of these days, you're gonna 'buy it'!" Although married, he persistently pursues Jennifer, who shows no interest in him.
 
* [[Venus Flytrap (character)|Venus Flytrap]] is the soulful and funky overnight DJ, running his show with smooth-talking persona and mood lighting in the studio. He maintains an aura of mysteriousness, which turns out to be a cover for the fact that he is wanted by the law.
 
* [[Bailey Quarters]] is the young ingenue of the radio station, originally in charge of billing and station traffic, but later given additional duties as an on-air news reporter. She proves more capable than Less although she once made the mistake claiming a fictional character in one of her reports which almost costs the station its [[broadcast license]]. She is the most wholesome member of the WKRP team, and in one episode, she mentions being a member of her church's choir. She is vastly overshadowed by Jennifer, the blonde bombshell of the station, but still pretty and likeable, and has been likened to "[[Mary Ann Summers|Mary Ann]]" compared to Jennifer's "[[Ginger Grant|Ginger]]".
 
==The "real" WKRP==
 
The call letters WKRP are assigned to a low-power AM station in the [[Washington, DC]] area. [http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/callsign/prod/query.hts?Call_Sign=WKRP]
 
Executive producer and show creator [[Hugh Wilson]] once worked at [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]] radio station [[WQXI (AM)|WQXI]] (then a pop music station) which served as inspiration for the series, station, and several characters.
 
There is a radio station WKRC in Cincinnati. Except for almost identical call letters, there is no known connection between the two entities.
 
In the early 1980s, a station in [[Salt Lake City]] briefly identified themselves on-air as "WKRP in Salt Lake City". Their actual call letters were KRPN, so they were really saying "(W)KRPN, Salt Lake City".
 
==Musical themes==
 
WKRP had two different musical themes, one opening the show and one closing it. The closing theme had nonsense lyrics.
 
'''Opening theme lyrics:'''
 
''Baby, if you ever wonder''<br>
''Wonder whatever became of me''<br>
''I'm living on the air in Cincinnati''<br>
''Cincinnati, WKRP.''
 
''Got tired of the packing and unpacking''<br>
''Town to town, up and down the dial''<br>
''Baby you and me were never meant to be''<br>
''So maybe think of me once in a while.''<br>
''I'm at WKRP in Cincinnati.''
 
==External links==
*[http://us.imdb.com/Title?0077097 WKRP] on [[Internet Movie Database|IMDb]]
*[http://www.tvguide.com/tv/showguide/showPage.asp?iprogramid=5798 Summary and episode guide] from ''TV Guide''
[[Category:CBS network shows]]
[[Category:Sitcoms]]
[[Category:Fictional radio stations]]
[[Category:1970s TV shows in the United States]]
[[Category:1980s TV shows in the United States]]