Columnists, COLUMNS--FEATURE SPOT, Opinion, Scot Beard
 By  Scot Beard Published 
8:00 am Wednesday, June 29, 2011

How does the radio know what I’m thinking?

It amazes me when I am listening to the radio and a song or two comes on that reflect my thoughts at that exact moment.

Most of the time I take it in stride, but other times it almost feels as though the people at the radio station have a direct connection to my thoughts. What is really creepy is when that happens on more than one occasion in a short period of time.

Such was the case the other night when I was scanning stations in my car and heard three different songs that did this in less than an hour. The more interesting thing is that the songs were on three different radio stations.

I began scanning the dial and thought about how much music has changed since I was a kid.

I was born in 1980 and my family listened to quite a bit of Top 40 radio back then. Some of my earliest memories of music are sitting in the living room with my sister and watching MTV — back when MTV actually showed music videos instead of a bunch of awful reality television.

As I scanned the radio stations I remembered watching MTV and waiting for videos I liked to come on. My favorite video as a kid was Dire Straights’ “Money for Nothing.”

I loved that video because of the really cool computer animation – if you haven’t seen it, look it up online and see how far computer animation has come since 1985. I began thinking about that song and within a few moments I heard it on the radio.

I then began to think about how my tastes in music evolved over the years and started to remember the music I listened to in high school. For some reason I thought of my high school girlfriend and her fascination with Jewel. When I would talk to her on the phone, she was always listening to Jewel and learning to play the songs on her guitar.

Needless to say, I got burned out on Jewel quickly — it did not take too much since I was not a fan in the first place. But wouldn’t you know it, within a few minutes I was scanning the stations again and I heard a few lines of Jewel’s “Foolish Games.” I listened to two lines and hit the scan button again.

By this time it was getting late and I began to feel tired. I have always been a bit of a night owl, but in recent years my bedtime has rolled back from the early morning hours to the p.m. hours of the current day.

I thought about being younger and going weeks on end with less than four hours of sleep each night. Now, I am usually in bed by 11 p.m., which is a late night for me. There was a time when I could stay up until 6 a.m., get a few hours of sleep and be refreshed — unfortunately, if I do not get at least seven hours of sleep I am dragging for much of the following day.

As I contemplated getting older, the scan function stopped on a country station and Toby Keith was singing, “I ain’t as good as I once was; my how the years have flown; but there was a time back in my prime; when I could really hold my own.”

It was the perfect summery of the thoughts going through my head at the time.

I laughed out loud about how strange it was to hear three songs that pegged my thoughts so perfectly. Maybe the folks at the radio stations to have a direct pipeline to my thoughts after all.

Also on Franklin County Times
State rankings | Red Bay rises, hits first poll since 2020
High School Sports, Red Bay Tigers, Sports
By A. Stacy Long For the FCT 
October 29, 2025
Red Bay has pulled into the state rankings for the first time in five years. The Tigers are 10th in the latest Alabama Sports Writers Association Clas...
Principals honored by city’s school board
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
October 29, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — The City Schools Board of Education recognized the system’s principals during its Oct. 21 meeting. Superintendent Dr. Tim Guinn describ...
Rickman: ‘I don’t sweat the small stuff anymore’
Main, News, Z - News Main
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
October 29, 2025
TUSCUMBIA — When Carrie Rickman felt something unusual during a routine self-check in June 2018, she trusted her instincts. “I was just taking a showe...
Cultura Garden Club hosts district meeting
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
October 29, 2025
The Cultura Garden Club hosted the Garden Clubs of Alabama District 1 meeting at North Highlands Church of Christ. The theme of the meeting was “Roots...
Medicare Advantage helps preserve choice for seniors
Columnists, Opinion
October 29, 2025
In every corner of Alabama, one concern comes up repeatedly with family health care. Seniors worry about keeping it affordable. People with disabiliti...
Honoring his mother on Día de los Muertos
News, Russellville
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
October 29, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — When José Figueroa-Cifuentes lights a candle, he’s not just illuminating a wick — he’s keeping his mother’s legacy alive. A signature l...
Students respond to lure of competitive fishing
Belgreen Bulldogs, Phil Campbell Bobcats, Red Bay Tigers, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
October 29, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — A new countywide fishing team is giving more Franklin County students the chance to cast a line and compete. The Franklin County Angler...
UNA can’t figure out how to win on the road
Sports
David Glovach For the FCT 
October 29, 2025
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. — The setting was different — the town, the stadium, the opposing team. The scene facing North Alabama, however, was the same leavi...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *