Radio America
Summary: Remember the good old Days, when we could just sit down and listen to a good ole' story, the days of glory and honor, come join us at the living room and listen to some fun times. How we could let our hair down and relax.
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Every week 20 million listeners tuned in to catch the verbal antics of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello-two former vaudevillians who took rapid-fire repartee to a new level. Now you can relive the Golden Age of Radio with The Abbott and Costello Show, Radio Spirits' first big collection of Bud and Lou classics
Every week 20 million listeners tuned in to catch the verbal antics of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello-two former vaudevillians who took rapid-fire repartee to a new level. Now you can relive the Golden Age of Radio with The Abbott and Costello Show, Radio Spirits' first big collection of Bud and Lou classics
Johhny Dollar
Johhny Dollar
Six Shooter
Six Shooter
Gasoline Alley
Gasoline Alley
John F. Kennedy Speech
John F. Kennedy Speech
Abbott & Costello
Abbott & Costello
The songs that Billy Murray popularized are classic American tunes, from "Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis" to "Give My Regards to Broadway," and from "Harrigan" to "K-K-K-Katy (Stammering Song)." You'll notice that a number of the songs were composed by George M. Cohan: more than any other recording artist of the early industry, Murray was the primary interpreter of the now-famous songs of Cohan, the original "Yankee Doodle Boy."
The songs that Billy Murray popularized are classic American tunes, from "Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis" to "Give My Regards to Broadway," and from "Harrigan" to "K-K-K-Katy (Stammering Song)." You'll notice that a number of the songs were composed by George M. Cohan: more than any other recording artist of the early industry, Murray was the primary interpreter of the now-famous songs of Cohan, the original "Yankee Doodle Boy."
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad is an animated feature produced by Walt Disney Studios and released to theaters on October 5, 1949 by RKO Radio Pictures. It is the eleventh animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. This film was the final of Disney's 1940s "package films" (feature films comprised of two or more short subjects instead of a single feature-length story). Beginning with the next animated feature release, Cinderella, his studio would return to the feature-length stories that low income and World War II had caused a drought of during the 1940s.