Hey Ogg;
-=> Ogg wrote to Brian Rogers <=-
Og> I always thought a producer was someone who backed a show with
Og> finances - much like how that term is used in the film
Og> industry. But the term that was on the schedule-board was
Og> "technician".
Much different meanings! A producer helps coordinate a show, may run the board,
coordinate any guests, etc.
Og> It went alright. The university radio station had three
Og> studios all "connected" and visible to each other by large
Og> glass windows. I would be in one studio and the host would be
Og> in another. The host of the show would either give me a hand
Og> signal or they give me the key words to listen to before
Og> starting a song or breaking to commercial.
I could never do a show like that. While I realize it may have been easier for
you, I'd still have an issue doing that.
Og> I really enjoyed cueing the tunes on LPs so that the music or
Og> the voice over is just enough before the actual lyrics start.
Tight board work is always a pleasure and self rewarding.
Og> Then, sometimes it required prepping a taped announcement (I
Og> think they were on 8-track cartridges!)
They were either 2 or 3 track CARTs. I have a multitude of carts and decks.
One of my older ones is an original Harris Critereon from WLS in Chicago.
It came with a tech manual and after reviewing it I made an Eq for the
playback cans. Sounds pretty damn good.
Og> To qualify being part of the radio club, we were put through a
Og> test that consisted of a mock solo radio show. I did quite
Og> alright by "producing" a music-themed trivia show, but I really
Og> just prefered to manage the equipment and switches and let
Og> someone else do the talking.
I never minded the announcing. I'm sure it was a pretty simple test to take.
Og> I volunteered to power up the transmitters on Sunday mornings
Og> and queue the national anthem. That was a cool job with lots of
Og> switches to flip and dials to turn.
I bet! When I was in high school still, I was doing a sunday morning show
and then had to run the weekly god squad. It was a 500Watt daytime AM that
played hot A/C... borderline CHR. I'd have to fire up the transmitters and
wait a bit for them to be at spec before turning the switch to the sticks out
in back on.
The station had a cat, it was it's mascot of sorts which was cool. Feeding the
cat was part of opening duties. It was a pretty neutral cat, not mean but not
overly friendly.
... My computer keeps answering me back ! (No I don't)
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