what was your how did the public get to know you? i wrote a song. i was playing in bars, 16, 17, 18 years old. you thought that was, in fact, the big-time. you realized unless you started writing your own stuff you were going to be in a bar band for the rest of your life. i quit my own cover band to join an original band singing for somebody else. that was short-lived. i started to pen my own material. this was down on the jersey shore. fortunately for me, i thought, who is the loneliest man in the music business? the d.j. you are talking to a microphone. for somebody who began in radio. larry: i was one. i know. you wondered, is anyone or everyone listening to me? i went to a brand new radio station. so knew, they didn t have a receptionist. i knocked on the booth of the d.j. he was on the air, put the record on. he came out, what can i do for you? i said, i m frustrated. i m holding this tape. nobody is responding to it.
or i guess better than perry s? i think he was the rolling stones compared to a bar band. that was the one one of the greatest unforced errors of presidential politics. anyone can forget something and become flustered which was what happened in rick perry s case, but in herman cain s case, he wasn t wasn t flustered. he didn t know. you can watch it. the mental index cards. trying to find the right to read the sound bide r byte per the advice he gave in the he couldn t do that when he got around to answering the question. it was substantially wrong. sorry there an inverse form of racism at work where cain is in effect being given a pass at every juncture because the right doesn t want to apply the same standards to their favorite african-american as they do say
i wrote a song. i was playing in bars, 16, 17, 18 years old. you thought that was, in fact, the big-time. you realized unless you started writing your own stuff you were going to be in a bar band for the rest of your life. i quit my own cover band to join an original band singing for somebody else. that was short-lived. i started to pen my own material. this was down on the jersey shore. fortunately for me, i thought, who is the loneliest man in the music business? the d.j. you are talking to a microphone. for somebody who began in radio. larry: i was one. i know. you wondered, is anyone or everyone listening to me? i went to a brand new radio station. so knew, they didn t have a receptionist. i knocked on the booth of the d.j. he was on the air, put the record on. he came out, what can i do for you? i said, i m frustrated. i m holding this tape. nobody is responding to it. listen to it.