Key Takeaways:
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Project: Boss Global Radio relaunches its station imaging identity with a full radio imaging package by Dane Reid.
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Production Agency: Dane Reid Media (21-year voiceover industry veteran) will produce the audio for Boss Global Radio.
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Station Profile: Independent, non-corporate digital hip-hop platform established in 2021 by Greg Lopez in Odessa, TX.
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Target Demographic: Millennial and Gen Z streaming audiences who reject traditional corporate radio announcer styles.
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Broadcast Specifications: 24/7 uncompressed WAV streaming (“Hip Hop in Hi-Fi”) with a global footprint spanning 90+ nations.
My Voice Is Now the Sound of Boss Global Radio
Radio is like life. It has a way of circling back. You leave a market, you move on, you keep building — and then someone from that same world finds you again with something bigger in mind. That’s exactly what happened with Boss Global Radio.
How a Texas Radio Market Reconnected Me to My Next Chapter
A few years back, I was the imaging voice of KZBT, a hip hop station out of Odessa, Texas. What made that run notable wasn’t just the work itself, but the approach I brought to it. The traditional imaging voice for urban radio had always been the Voice of God: authoritative, polished, undeniably cool, but rooted in a baby boomer sensibility. Still credible, but it was your dad’s or your grandfather’s version of cool — a voice reading copy with swagger rather than speaking a language the audience actually recognized as their own.
The shelf life on that model was running out as Gen X’ers like myself seeded their hippity hoppity stations to the young whipper snappers. We moved on to old school stations where those voices still worked.
The listeners driving hip hop culture today are Gen Z and millennials. They’ve grown up in a world of direct creator-to-audience communication and streaming platforms that put them in control. They don’t respond to being talked at. They respond to being talked to. I built a style specifically around that dynamic — conversational without losing energy, direct without feeling manufactured — and it connected. When KZBT changed formats a couple of years ago, that chapter closed. But the work I did there clearly made an impression that outlasted the gig.
Greg Lopez Found Me on My Website
Last November, Greg Lopez reached out through my website. Greg is the founder and owner of Boss Global Radio, an independent digital station he built from the ground up in Odessa, Texas. He was familiar with my work at KZBT and had a clear sense of what he was building toward. What stood out immediately was that Greg didn’t move fast. There were personal transitions on his end, details to work through, and a negotiation that stretched across several months. He is a savvy businessman and serious music-lover who knows exactly what he wants and has no interest in settling to get there faster. What he wanted was considerably more than just a voice.
Boss Global Radio Is One of the Most Serious Independent Stations I’ve Worked With
What sets Boss Global Radio apart from virtually every other station in my portfolio isn’t just its reach or its independence — it’s the audio standard it holds itself to. Greg built this station around a concept he calls Hip Hop in Hi-Fi. Traditional AM and FM broadcasting compresses audio as a function of how the signal travels — quality degrades based on transmission frequency, broadcasting infrastructure, and distance from the tower. Most online radio doesn’t improve on that by much. Boss Global Radio streams in uncompressed WAV format, the same delivery standard I use when sending finished voiceover and audio to television production houses for national commercial work. It’s the purest form of audio available, and for listeners who have spent years accepting compressed streams as the standard, the difference is noticeable.
The station has been operational since 2021, runs 24/7, and reaches audiences across more than 90 countries. Greg built every element of it on his own — the programming, the digital infrastructure, the show lineup, the listener community — without investors, label relationships, or corporate backing. His audience is strongest in the United States, Japan, Mexico, Thailand, and Canada, but the signal extends well beyond those markets. Building that kind of global footprint without institutional support is something I have genuine respect for, because I understand what that level of sustained independent effort actually requires.
Dane Reid Media Is Producing the Full Audio Package — Not Just the Voice
The structure of this deal is what makes it meaningful to me professionally. Greg didn’t just license my voice — he contracted Dane Reid Media to produce the complete imaging identity for the station. That includes the voiceover, the audio production, the music beds, and the full audio framework of how the station presents itself to the world. I brought in two producers I’ve worked with for years, and together we built something that goes well beyond dropping a new voice into an existing template. It’s a full reimagining of the station’s sound.
How I engage as a voice talent is straightforward: I record the copy, deliver the files, and the station takes it from there. This is a different kind of relationship. Greg approached it as a creative partnership, and that calls for a different level of investment from me into the station.
The new imaging launched on June 19th, 2026 — Juneteenth. That date seems fitting for a station launched from Texas. Considering it’s identity is built around Hip Hop culture, and resistance to an industry that has historically undervalued Black artistic contributions, launching on that date aligned with mission and meaning.
Filling the Chair After a Legend — and Why the Style Had to Change
Before this partnership came together, Greg had been working with a legend in radio imaging. He’s someone whose work I studied carefully early in my own career. His approach influenced how I thought about radio imaging. His versatility is exceptional. He can move between urban, country, and television broadcast formats without losing credibility in any of them. His ability and range are rare.
The issue isn’t talent — it’s generational fit. His voice is that of a baby boomer. “The Boss” deliberately targets Gen Z and millennial listeners who came of age in the streaming era. That can create a gap that even a strong performance can’t close. I compare it to how young people think of Jay-Z. He’s a legend in hip-hop, but no one under 45 would recognize him. The style I’ve developed and tested across radio markets was built specifically to overcome that barrier.
What This Means for Dane Reid Media
Over 21 years, I’ve provided imaging voices for stations across the country and internationally. My work reaches audiences in Ghana, Nigeria, the Caribbean, and Asia. I’ve worked across gospel, Urban AC, hip hop, and other formats. But being brought in as a full production company, not just a voice, for a station with this level of audio integrity and a listener base spanning 90 countries is a different kind of milestone.
This is a long-term collaboration to be constructed over the next few years. Greg’s vision for Boss Global Radio is built around independence. It’s a refusal to let corporate algorithms and industry politics define what Hip Hop sounds like. Anyone who knows me knows that’s how I’ve always approached my life.
I’m excited to be the voice of Boss Global Radio. You can hear my work at www.BossGlobalRadio.com



