NEW YEAR – It is time for a look back on the songs which the computer algorithm determined that John played most last year. This retrospective playlist arrives as 2023 ends and 2024 begins on Crosscurrents January 1st at 8:00 AM. Listen live at www.KRNN.org, 102.7fm, or 103.1fm. Note Time listed is Alaska / GNT (-9)
LIVE STREAM RADII LINK: https://www.ktoo.org/listen/krnn/
The first documented time ball was on top of England’s Royal Observatory at Greenwich, where it would drop at 1:00 p.m. each afternoon as a way to let nearby ships and boats know what time it was. This was before watches or cell phones, so the ball dropping was the primary way to tell time.
our three favorite radio show themes of 2023
Louis Brandeis birthday
Offshore Broadcast Offense Act
Earhart and Beech birthdays

The very first Times Square New Year’s Eve celebration took place on December 31, 1904—but there was no ball drop that year. The event was organized by Adolph Ochs, the owner of The New York Times. The newspaper had just opened its headquarters in Times Square, and Ochs wanted a memorable way to ring in the new year and celebrate the newspaper’s milestones. That year, 200,000 people gathered in the streets of New York City to celebrate.
Each year after the 1904 event, Ochs organized bigger and more elaborate New Year’s Eve parties in Times Square. In December of 1907, he commissioned a large New Year’s Eve ball that would be lowered as the crowd counted down to midnight. The ball was made of iron and wood, and weighed over 700 pounds.
The tradition was such a success that Ochs kept organizing the celebration year after year, even after The New York Times moved out of Times Square. Since then, millions of people have watched the ball’s 141-foot descent in person and on live
The original 700-pound iron and wood ball that Ochs commissioned was used from 1907 to 1920, when it was replaced with a lighter 400-pound ball made of wrought iron. In 1955, it was replaced again with an even lighter 150-pound ball made from aluminum.
The aluminum ball was used until 1981, when it was given a makeover with red light bulbs and a green stem to represent the apple of the “I Love New York” campaign. This was used through 1988 when the red bulbs were swapped for white. In 1995, rhinestones and computer-controlled strobe lights were added to the ball.
For New Year’s Eve 1999, the ball was replaced again to celebrate the new millennium. The ball was created by Waterford Crystal and Philips Lighting and was decorated with real crystals and computerized lights. Seven years later in 2007, the companies redesigned the ball again in celebration of the 100th year of the Times Square tradition.
The official Ball—the one that’s used today—is decorated with modern LED lighting. The ball measures six feet across and weighs more than 11,000 pounds. The computerized lighting technology can display more than 16,000 colors and patterns, which is why the ball has a different display each year
SOURCE: Better Hones And Gardens
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Your kind comments help me keep going. Thank you.
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Your support is appreciated. Thanks.
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Here’s to a ‘pawsome’ 2024 and we continue to look forward to reading your posts. Happy New Year’s!
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Thank you for your unique, educational, and adorable shares. Cheers! ✨
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🙏✨🙏✨🙏
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Fun stuff set for tomorrow on the radio too. Thanks for your support.
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Thank you so very much. I extend likewise to you too.
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Who knew? Very educational!
xo, jude
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Wishing you a very, very happy and healthy 2024 💖✨️🎊
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