Request Line: Can We Talk About It?

Still me, tWBS  this week. OK, settle down everyone. Rikki-Tikki-Deadly  will allegedly be back next week.  Allegedly. Hopefully, he'll have a more uplifting theme for you.  But I'm in a bad mood and music is the only thing soothing my weary soul. I've had a bad coupla weeks.  Bad coupla months, actually. But it hit

Request Line: Buckle Up

I'm sitting in for Rikki-Tikki-Deadly  this week on request line. He has decided it was a good idea to get on a plane and fly to the other side of the world. And even though he's all fancy n junk and can afford to be flying, probably in first class knowing him... I've

Request Line: Coffee is for Closers

INT. RECORDING STUDIO - DAY PATRICK MAHOMES stands in the office outside the studio, smoking a cigarette. DJ 3000 is near the wall, watching MAHOMES stalking back and forth. THE PRODUCER comes into the room, he folds up a newspaper and drops it on his desk, suggesting he's just been using

DFO Radio: Songs of Hope

Last week, our former President dropped by to lead us in collecting some songs about hope.  I thought it would be a nice, happy, uplifting way to bring Request Line and DFO Radio to a close as the regular season begins.  But then Saturday happened.  So now instead of joining

Request Line: Songs of Hope

INT. RECORDING STUDIO - DAY DJ 3000: ...and ownership wouldn't even tell you who it's going to be? PRODUCER: That's right.  They said it was going to be a special treat, though. DJ 3000: Maybe it's Tombstone! PRODUCER: Don't get me wrong, Tombstone's great, but I don't think he's got enough star power to

DFO Radio: Yes and No

Sorry folks, gotta phone this one in cause I've got a Raiders preview to finish writing!                                   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4nmxz5bQhk&list=PLM8nWenhx6H_j_DojR5SeI0M6vdX1s182   Hi! If

Request Line: Yes and No

INT. RECORDING STUDIO - DAY. PRODUCER: ...and so I suppose at the end of the day, it's like that familiar saying, "how do we get to yes?" Now throughout this process, you've maintained radio silence. KHALIL MACK: Yes. PRODUCER: You haven't commented publicly at all? KHALIL MACK: No. PRODUCER: Well this is a treat for

DFO Radio: Do Your Job

One of the things I really enjoyed about Max Brooks' novel World War Z was that it took a fictional premise (zombies), set up the ground rules (slow moving unintelligent zombies, virus transmitted by direct contact, killed by headshot) and then tried to extrapolate how society would be affected in

Request Line: Do Your Job

INT. RECORDING STUDIO - DAY We join our regularly scheduled program in progress... PRODUCER: ...but I think it's great that the team kept you on the payroll. JIM MCNALLY: Yeah, well, those ticket stubs aren't going to sort themselves. PRODUCER: No, I suppose that's true.  Unless everything were done electronically, you know, using barcodes