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SYRIA: Radio as a sound sensation

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It’s the midmorning commute, and time for the horoscope on ‘Good Morning Syria,’ the nation’s hottest radio show.

‘Cancer,’ host Honey Sayed addresses listeners first in Arabic, then in English, with an air of sisterly candor, ‘don’t get all worked up for nothing.’

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On the other side of the window, deejay Abdullah Shaaban cues an oldie from John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John. ‘I got chills, they’re multiplying,’ Travolta sings. ‘And I’m losing control.’

Honey laughs and continues with her astrology report. ‘An opportunity is present,’ she coos into the microphone, ‘so take it, Leo.’

Newly instituted freedom on the nation’s airwaves has transformed Syria’s sonic landscape. Some say it is shaping the way people view themselves, part of a wave of global influences turning this nation, whose government is the most hostile to the West in the Arab world, into the culture most amenable to it.

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Borzou Daragahi in Damascus

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