Hosted by Ferris O'Brien wrote:
The Spy is your go-to location for independent, local music and features more than a dozen unique specialty shows that include Indie Rock, Classic Alternative, 80s New Wave, Roots, Reggae, and much, much more. Additionally, The Spy hosts an all-vinyl show, an electronic dance music show, a couple of hip-hop shows, and an Oklahoma music show. These specialty shows set The Spy apart from traditional corporate radio.
Ferris O’Brien’s brand of The Spy has existed since 1998 when he took over as the Program Director at 93.7 The Spy (KSPI-FM in Stillwater). When station owners took The Spy off the air in 2001, Ferris secured ownership of the brand and moved it to Oklahoma City. In 2002, Citadel Communications launched a deep alternative format radio station (KSYY) and asked Ferris to take the helm. The station was killed in June 2004, but Ferris kept “Spy Radio” on the air as a once weekly specialty show on 100.5 The KATT. In 2009, Ferris purchased 105.3fm from Citadel and relaunched The Spy. When that purchase agreement feel through in December 2010, he took the station completely digital at thespyfm.com. In 2012, The Spy and KOSU established a new partnership that allowed The Spy to return to the FM dial.
You can listen to The Spy 7 days a week from 7pm to 5am, plus 11am-1pm on Sundays, on KOSU-FM 91.7 Oklahoma City, 107.5 Tulsa, 88.3 Stillwater, and 94.9 Ponca City.
You can also listen to The Spy 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at thespyfm.com.
Bobby, but not Bygone on KOSU THE SPY FM yea!
Bobby, but not Bygone on KOSU THE SPY FM yea!
Deep, but not Profound
Jeff Goldberg | Aug 24, 2017
The game was fun, but maddening. After about 30 minutes of playing and, several times, mistakenly thinking I had figured out the rule she finally asked her sister, brother and I if we wanted a clue. We did. Once she gave us the hint I immediately figured out the rule, and saw the lesson of the game which is: The simplest answer is often the right one, but we tend to overcomplicate things
The above post was discovered searching Bobby’s World after noticing the post below:
Re: For Whom Moroni's Trumpet Blows
https://discussmormonism.com/posting.ph ... &p=2883750
Jeff Goldberg | Aug 24, 2017
(She's incredibly intelligent, a great source of pride for me)https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/deep-pro ... o-goldberg
This past weekend my oldest daughter taught our family a thinking game, called "Deep but not Profound." In this game, the "leader" says a series of two words, stopping after each set of two words to let the participants try to figure out the "rule" that binds the words the leader chooses to use. My daughter knows I like thinking games, and pride myself on being reasonably intelligent, so she likes to test me!
The game was fun, but maddening. After about 30 minutes of playing and, several times, mistakenly thinking I had figured out the rule she finally asked her sister, brother and I if we wanted a clue. We did. Once she gave us the hint I immediately figured out the rule, and saw the lesson of the game which is: The simplest answer is often the right one, but we tend to overcomplicate things
The above post was discovered searching Bobby’s World after noticing the post below:
Re: For Whom Moroni's Trumpet Blows
https://discussmormonism.com/posting.ph ... &p=2883750
Anyways word tuple type ideas go by many abbreviations here that include CbnC, GbnG, all following on the heels of my own strange introduction to DbnP
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