

The BBC Arabic service started broadcasting on FM here and it is just not the same when you don't hear the static. But the BBC World Service killed in one move a favorite Iraqi pastime: searching for perfect reception.
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Some cities have their own local stations and there are two Kurdish TV channels.

Bad choice for kids' programming if you ask me. It is about what happens after a third world war when chaos reigns the Earth. My favourite TV show on it is an old Japanese cartoon (here it is called Adnan wa Lina). Besides all the papers we now have a TV channel and radio they are part of what our American minders have called the Iraqi media network. Look, I paid for the Hawza paper so why not take the commie one gratis?Īlthough the Ministry of Information has been broken up and around 2,000 employees given the boot, the media industry, if you can call it that, is doing very well. Newspaper heaven! It turns out that no one is buying any copies of the paper published by the Iraqi Communist workers party he just wants to unload it on me. When the newspaper man saw how happy I was with my papers he asked if I would like to take one for free. I got five papers for 1,750 dinars, around $1.50 it felt like I was buying the famous bread of bab-al-agha: hot, crispy and cheap.
