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Alastor was created by Medrano during her time at School of Visual Arts in New York City, [10] appearing unnamed on her DeviantArt page "circa. 2008". He was planned to be incorporated into her 2012 webcomic series ZooPhobia as a supporting character in a planned "Angels and Demons" story arc following his formal creation in 2011, [11] on the arc's cancellation in 2016 and subsequent ...
Alastor (voiced by Amir Talai [3]), also known as The Radio Demon, is an eccentric overlord of Hell. He was once a radio broadcaster in the 1930s, and is now a demon with deer-like characteristics. His voice has an effect that imitates radio static, complete with sound effects and theme music.
World Radio Tower Santa Maria: Santa Maria, Texas: Guyed Mast 360.3 m Richland Towers Tower Atlanta: Atlanta, Georgia Guyed Mast 360 m Trinity Broadcasting Tower Oklahoma: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Guyed Mast 359.1 m Prairie Public Broadcasting Tower: Amenia, North Dakota: Guyed Mast 358.7 m Cox Radio Tower Security: Security, Texas: Guyed Mast ...
Continuing in Adventure World's "Plane Crash" sub-story is another new Expedition that's now available in the game: Radio Tower. This Expedition sees a character named Ken giving you a tip that an ...
Lighting on a Houston radio tower reportedly failed just days before it was hit by a helicopter on Sunday, killing four people in a fiery explosion that toppled the tower and left debris scattered ...
A radio station in Alabama was forced to go silent after thieves stole its 200-foot radio tower and other equipment from a building. The station, WJLX, sent a landscaping crew to the site Friday ...
A second, smaller, 30 m (98 ft) tall tower was installed by the US Coast Guard in the autumn of 1961 as part of a LORAN-A network paired with Greenland. The LORAN-C scheme closed in 1994. In 1991, the original RÚV 1930 longwave transmitter tower at Vatnsendi (near Reykjavík) collapsed.
The tower fell onto a nearby utility line which provided power to the remainder of Duluth's television and FM radio stations, and all but one AM radio station. Telephone and power lines snapped leaving Duluth and many northeastern Minnesota communities without utility services for 24 hours.