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Old School RapA Better Old School Classic Rap Radio Station. We dig DEEP in the crates to deliver a REAL Old School Rap Station. No Autotune allowed. Just Dope Beats, Rhyme and Flava.
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Awesome 80sA Better 80s Radio Station plays your all time favorite Pop, New Wave and Rock Songs.
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70s HitsA Better 70s Hits Station playing the best in Groovy 70s AM Classic Radio Hits. Pop dominates this channel.
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Smokin' ReggaeA Better Smokin' Reggae Roots Radio Station plays today's hottest Reggae Smash Hits including Dancehall, Dub, Ragga and your all time favorites.
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70s Disco InfernoA Better Disco Inferno Radio Station plays the absolute biggest 70s Disco Hits of all time. Relive NYC's famous Studio 54 era!
Paul Petersen (born William Paul Petersen on September 23, 1945, in Glendale, California) is an American movie actor, singer, novelist, and activist. Primarily known for his character-type roles in the 1960s and 1970s, as an adult Petersen established the organization A Minor Consideration to support child stars and other child laborers through legislation, family education, and personal intervention and counseling for those in crisis. Petersen achieved fame in the 1960s, at an early age, by playing Donna Reed's son, Jeff Stone, on The Donna Reed Show. In the early 1980s, he also had a recurring role as a police officer on Matt Houston, and in the late 1990s, he played the author Paul Conway in the film Mother's Day. Petersen started out in show business at the age of ten when he became a "Mouseketeer" on the Mickey Mouse Club. He was fired within two weeks for disorderly conduct. He was later quoted as saying, "I didn't know a kid actor shouldn't act like a kid." However, he achieved stardom as a teenage heartthrob on The Donna Reed Show, an ABC family sitcom that ran from 1958 to 1966. He played son Jeff Stone from the time he was twelve until he was twenty. In addition, he learned a great deal from Reed while he was growing up on the television set. Above all, he realized that Donna was his favorite actress to date in his business. Petersen sang his sentimental hit song My Dad to costar Carl Betz, who portrayed Dr. Alex Stone, in a 1962 episode of the series. His other costars were Shelley Fabares and his sister Patty Petersen as well as Bob Crane. He went on to act in many guest-roles, including one as a military officer in the short-lived 1967 ABC western series Custer, with Wayne Maunder in the title role. As the years passed, the television appearances grew increasingly infrequent. Petersen said that too many casting directors do not permit bubblegum stars to grow into adult actors. Petersen's fame brought recording offers and although his singing voice was limited, he had hit record singles with songs "She Can't Find Her Keys", "Amy", and "Lollipops and Roses", as well as "My Dad" that made #6 on the Billboard Hot 100. He also recorded during the 1960s for Motown, including the singles "Chained" (later a hit for Marvin Gaye) and "A Little Bit For Sandy." Difficult times followed his disappearance from the Hollywood spotlight. As a result, Petersen returned to the university and obtained a degree in literature that helped him to write sixteen adventure novels. Petersen's authorship began after he met David Oliphant, a New York publisher visiting Los Angeles. His first novel concerned car racing. Thereafter, he created a Matt Helm-type hero, Eric Saveman, also known as "The Smuggler." In one year, Pocket Books published eight of his Smuggler novels, earning Petersen $75,000. In 1977 Petersen's autobiography, Walt, Mickey and Me: Confessions of the First Ex-Mouseketeer, was published. Petersen has been married 3 times: In 1967, Peterson married actress Brenda Benet; the couple divorced in 1970. In 1974, Petersen married Hallie Littman; they had two children, then were divorced in 1988. Petersen married Rana Jo Platz in 1992. In 1990, he founded the child-actor support group called A Minor Consideration to improve working conditions for child actors and to assist in the transition between working as a child actor and adult life, whether in acting or in other professions. He is currently the board member of the Donna Reed Foundation, and works for the Donna Reed Festival, which takes place on the third week of June, every year, in his mentor's hometown of Denison, Iowa. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.