

" Ol' Man Mose" by Eddy Duchin and His Orchestra, featuring Patricia Norman (1938)." Nobody's Fault but Mine" by Blind Willie Johnson (1934)." Mister Five by Five" by Freddie Slack, featuring Johnny Mercer and Ella Mae Morse (1942)." Midnight in a Madhouse" by Chick Webb and His Orchestra (1937)." Keep A Knockin" by Milton Brown (1936)." Just a Fair Weather Friend" by Henry King and His Orchestra, featuring Joe Sudy (1934)." Jumpin' at the Woodside" by Count Basie and His Orchestra (1938)." Jukebox Saturday Night" by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra, featuring the Modernaires and the Ink Spots (1942)." It's All Over But the Crying" by the Ink Spots (1947)." In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town" by Johnny Long and his Orchestra (1946)." I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire" by the Ink Spots (1941)." I Didn't Know the Gun Was Loaded" by Patsy Montana and her Buckaroos (1949)." I Can't Dance (I Got Ants in My Pants)" by Chick Webb's Savoy Orchestra (1934)." Headin' Down the Wrong Highway" by Johnny Bond (2000)." Happy Days Are Here Again" by Ben Selvin and His Orchestra (1930)." Ghost Riders in the Sky" by The Sons of the Pioneers (1960)." Don't Fence Me In" by Vic Schoen and His Orchestra, featuring Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters (1944)." Doin' the Uptown Lowdown" by the Isham Jones Orchestra, featuring Joe Martin (1933)." Dear Hearts and Gentle People" by Bob Crosby and the Bob Cats (1950)." Dark as a Dungeon" by Tennessee Ernie Ford (1955)." Crazy He Calls Me" by Billie Holiday (1949)." Civilization," also called "Bongo Bongo Bongo," by Vic Schoen and His Orchestra, featuring Danny Kaye and the Andrews Sisters (1947)." Butcher Pete (Part 1)" by Roy Brown and his Mighty, Mighty Men (1950)." Bubbles in My Beer" by Bob Wills (1947)." Atom Bomb Baby" by the Five Stars (1957)." Anything Goes" by Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks, featuring Cole Porter (1934, 2004 re-recording)." Answer to Drivin' Nails in My Coffin" by Jerry Irby and His Texas Rangers (1948)." Ain't Misbehavin'" by Fats Waller (1943)." A Good Man is Hard to Find" by Sonny Burke and His Orchestra, featuring Cass Daley (1949).She will also reference unique cultural tidbits about post-War Appalachia, such as the traveling merchant Grahm, the rarity of ballistic fiber and the effects of Nukashine.

Julie continues to DJ Appalachia Radio, commenting on songs and their performers, especially regarding how they relate to the post-apocalypse. " Take Me Home, Country Roads" was overwhelmingly the favorite, and Julie speculates that it is still the case decades after the bombs. The radio station also has several terminals in the building, which recorded the most popular songs being broadcast before the Great War.

Julie claims that upon reaching the station, its equipment was days away from breaking down, and that with her arrival she averted a situation where the radio would continuously broadcast Cole Porter's " Anything Goes" on a loop. She had previously listened to the station, and because the songs meant so much to her, she wanted to make sure that the radio was kept in working order. Īs humans returned to the region after the Scorched Plague subsided, Julie, a young woman from the area, found the station where Appalachia Radio had its origin. When the Vault Dwellers of Vault 76 emerged on Reclamation Day in 2102, the radio lacked a DJ and played songs without any commentary. Julie implies the station was automated before she took over its operation. Radio placement in pre- War locations indicates that it was on the air before the Great War, though its history from 2077 until 2102 is uncertain. Appalachia Radio is broadcast from an unknown location within Appalachia that is not mentioned in-game.
