Mm, well
Don't laugh 'cause it ain't funny.
Look how it happened to me.
It could happen to you, you could be a fool too
and it'd leave you in misery.
I guess there's nothin' more funky king can do
but to try to get next to you.
So listen to your radio
Most each and every night
'Cause if you don't, I'm sure you won't
Get the feeling right
a fun fact, Heard It On The X is about the Border Blaster Radio Stations in Mexico that made really made Wolfman Jack Famous, he was known before then but he got syndicated from there in 1971.
from the wiki,
Don't laugh 'cause it ain't funny.
Look how it happened to me.
It could happen to you, you could be a fool too
and it'd leave you in misery.
I guess there's nothin' more funky king can do
but to try to get next to you.
So listen to your radio
Most each and every night
'Cause if you don't, I'm sure you won't
Get the feeling right
a fun fact, Heard It On The X is about the Border Blaster Radio Stations in Mexico that made really made Wolfman Jack Famous, he was known before then but he got syndicated from there in 1971.
from the wiki,
Quote:In 1963, Smith took his act to the border when Inter-American Radio Advertising's Ramon Bosquez hired him and sent him to the studio and transmitter site of XERF-AM at Ciudad Acuña in Mexico, a station across the U.S.-Mexico border from Del Rio, Texas, whose high-powered border blaster signal could be picked up across much of the United States. In an interview with writer Tom Miller, Smith described the reach of the XERF signal: "We had the most powerful signal in North America. Birds dropped dead when they flew too close to the tower. A car driving from New York to L.A. would never lose the station."[6]
In 1971, the Mexican government, under pressure from the Roman Catholic church, banned the Pentecostal preachers from the radio, taking away 80% of XERB's revenue. Smith then moved to station KDAY 1580 in Los Angeles, which could only pay him a fraction of his former XERB income. Smith capitalized on his fame, though, by editing his old XERB tapes and selling them to radio stations everywhere, becoming one of the first rock-and-roll syndicated programs (as the tapes began to age, they were eventually marketed to oldies stations). He also appeared on Armed Forces Radio from 1970 to 1986. At his peak, Wolfman Jack was heard on more than 2,000 radio stations in 53 countries.[9] He was heard as far afield as the Wild Coast, Transkei, on Capital Radio 604 based there.[10]
Wolfman Jack
"Never trust a weapon that you haven't personally test fired"
Jack Reacher
Jack Reacher