I was a board operator back in the days of turntables, tape machines, and cart machines. We did all the same things back then, just with more primitive equipment. When I was a freshman student at Purdue, one of my tasks was to insert the network commercials into the football radio network. We were feeding the game to a bunch of stations around Indiana and Illinois. The pressure was on, because if I screwed up my mistake got aired on a bunch of stations...
Nice work, nice overview, Xandra. Most listeners have no idea how the broadcasting process is conducted and it's good to talk about it. Personally, I stopped working as a radio operator quite a few years ago and it was a good time. But I don't forget what I did during those long years. Cheers to you, Xandra! Macedo Pinto, Portugal
I saw a morning radio show where the board op also did sidekick and news. They had a third person do traffic and weather and an intern running around making sure everything was where it needed to be at the right time for the on air people to use. The girl who did traffic was also the one who just came off a four hour 2AM-6AM dj shift.
Haha I worked in broadcast Television back in 60s & 70s radio is a piece of cake compared to TV where u had a mix film, video tape, announcers etc all which need pre-notification. Example film needed 3 second pre-roll, tape required 7 second pre-roll, announcers usually were not in the announce booth so they go a 5 min warning, 1 min warming prior to going live on air. Typically a simple sequencer was used that uses punch cards. This was so tue master control operator could make changes quickly. This was all before computers took over. A broadcast log was printed for each department so that commercials can be ready and in sequence for the next day. Some people made edited commercial reels for they day, but that was very inflexible. For example if an airline had crashed, the airlines did not want to broadcast their commercials for a period of time, so while the traffic dept scrambled to sell the air time, we would place PSAs in those empty slots. People think that video is exciting bit there are 3 phases to video. 1. Production - hurry up and wait 2. Post-production - fixing up a show 3. Broadcast - where each second in real time counts, the pressure cooker
Ah, the "crash" rules. I was doing a newscast and, having looked at the program log, kept going through the spot break with the engineers making all kids of gestures at me for ignoring them. After I was done I was asked, "What the Hell are you doing? Why didn't you take the spot break?" I replied by asking, "Who was the spot for?" The answer was the movie, "Invasion of The Body Snatchers." The lead story was John Wayne Gacy.
Even though this is 3 years old video, i wonder why you don't use the faders and for the microphones use the "on/off" button? Then for the telephone lines if one is behaving badly, i learned not to kill the line that second but just pull the fader down. The thought behind that is when that person is on the line, the person doesn't listen to you. And while that one is still on the line, he can't call back.
Yes, Adrian…all equipment needs specialist maintenance and this one is no exception. That's why I devoted myself to it on a large scale, during the time I spent working at radio stations. And that's also why I have a lot of broadcast equipment in my personal collection, all of it working properly. Health to you, with wishes for a good 2023!
Unfortunately they don't take board management very seriously here anymore. I have heard that they used to have someone come in quarterly to deep clean/replace buttons if needed but they just don't do that anymore. Probably a cost cut kind of thing :/ This means that some of the buttons require more pressure than others to actually fire their assigned function.
Typical of iHeart, it's been published in industry blogs for the past few years about how they have been reducing everyone on staff by the thousands. Many stations don't have DJ's now and they have had plans on replacing mangement positions with AI. Imagine if you will, back as recently as in the 90's, before consolidation, each station had a DJ doing a 4 hour shift and there would be different jocks on the weekend as well, 6 during the week and maybe up to 6 on the weekend, though some stations would use pre-recorded programs or national specialty shows to fill in some of that airtime (stations always try to cheap out on things, nothing has changed there). There would be someone working production, a traffic director (spot scheduling for those who don't know), a music director, Program director, Public Affairs Director, a Technical Director and sometimes a Chief Engineer (if the station was large enough) The sales department would consist of a few people, the Station Manager, business manager and even more depending on the size of the station. Since then conslidation happened and the mega station ownership groups began buying everything up and making clusters. Eventually 5 stations would exist in a space about the same as what was once 1. DJ's would get spread out to other duties on other stations, in many markets, all the dj's were pooled and many dismissed as it was cheaper to have one jock work several stations than the 5 it used to be (maybe not at first, it took time for these reductions to happen), voice tracking came along and made staff reductions along the mega owners even more possible by having 1 jock in LA be able to record the spots for many stations in the chain and run them via computer. In each of the "Clusters" the need for each of the other positions (TD, PD, MD, Sales, Managers, ect.) went the same way. No longer was the station manager working with 1 station, they would be working the cluster, or even deeper they came up regional positions where 1 person worked for groups of clusters, same for the other titled jobs. The only exception usually is in sales, but that's because of the turnaround in those positions, there's always sales jibs open in radio. (BTW: I left out a ton here, but it does give a general idea, and of course iHeart is the most notorious for blood letting amongst it's stations, just do some searches, it's nasty)
como chama mesa de som da radio ? .. vou monta uma radio pirata legal isso aqui só toca sertanejo a escuta musica rock . dualipa ariana taylo brasileira mpb .. as radio só fica no sertanejo ... muito linda
Sure, sometimes the host have me record things or find audio clips for them during a show break. A lot of this job is about timing and being quick with the software we work with. I think its pretty fun!
So what is this lady demonstrating? Is she playing the part of a "Radio Presenter" or a "producer"?! Because i think even a radio presenter can probably handle what she is doing when they are having a host in the studio!
I was a board operator back in the days of turntables, tape machines, and cart machines. We did all the same things back then, just with more primitive equipment. When I was a freshman student at Purdue, one of my tasks was to insert the network commercials into the football radio network. We were feeding the game to a bunch of stations around Indiana and Illinois. The pressure was on, because if I screwed up my mistake got aired on a bunch of stations...
Those were beautiful days unlike these!
Thank U
I’ve been watching this Several times. I’m applying 4 radio operator 4 overnight shift.
Your the best video
Did you get the job? :)
@@australianvoiceover nah
It was several people there & a few people ahead of me. & they hired 2 people for the nite gig. Right on the spot
Nice work, nice overview, Xandra.
Most listeners have no idea how the broadcasting process is conducted and it's good to talk about it.
Personally, I stopped working as a radio operator quite a few years ago and it was a good time. But I don't forget what I did during those long years.
Cheers to you, Xandra!
Macedo Pinto, Portugal
Excellent overview!! Many of the key points which help a show run smoothly! 👍
I saw a morning radio show where the board op also did sidekick and news. They had a third person do traffic and weather and an intern running around making sure everything was where it needed to be at the right time for the on air people to use. The girl who did traffic was also the one who just came off a four hour 2AM-6AM dj shift.
I love this video! I have been more interested in radio broadcasting since I first became an audiophile in 1978. Your show is very impressive.
Thank you, Xandra. Always been interested in radio and TV production. Bought an old Arrakis board to play around with.
That's great thank you for the three most important..
this is awesome, hi From New Zealand. Subbed.
Amazing video! Veryhelpful
Haha I worked in broadcast Television back in 60s & 70s radio is a piece of cake compared to TV where u had a mix film, video tape, announcers etc all which need pre-notification. Example film needed 3 second pre-roll, tape required 7 second pre-roll, announcers usually were not in the announce booth so they go a 5 min warning, 1 min warming prior to going live on air. Typically a simple sequencer was used that uses punch cards. This was so tue master control operator could make changes quickly. This was all before computers took over.
A broadcast log was printed for each department so that commercials can be ready and in sequence for the next day. Some people made edited commercial reels for they day, but that was very inflexible. For example if an airline had crashed, the airlines did not want to broadcast their commercials for a period of time, so while the traffic dept scrambled to sell the air time, we would place PSAs in those empty slots.
People think that video is exciting bit there are 3 phases to video.
1. Production - hurry up and wait
2. Post-production - fixing up a show
3. Broadcast - where each second in real time counts, the pressure cooker
Ah, the "crash" rules. I was doing a newscast and, having looked at the program log, kept going through the spot break with the engineers making all kids of gestures at me for ignoring them. After I was done I was asked, "What the Hell are you doing? Why didn't you take the spot break?" I replied by asking, "Who was the spot for?" The answer was the movie, "Invasion of The Body Snatchers." The lead story was John Wayne Gacy.
@@dickginkowski6071 Heheh the news is a very dynamic program for sure
THANK GREAT INFORMATION💯❤⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Thanks, beautiful Xandra 😍
Excellent overview!!
And i hope you have a nice year!
Great work hope to work with you ❤❤❤Namibia 🇳🇦
So... necessary to super-aggressively pound the buttons 8 times each? :-)
Even though this is 3 years old video, i wonder why you don't use the faders and for the microphones use the "on/off" button? Then for the telephone lines if one is behaving badly, i learned not to kill the line that second but just pull the fader down. The thought behind that is when that person is on the line, the person doesn't listen to you. And while that one is still on the line, he can't call back.
Great video
I with WRLR 98.3 IN Round Lake Beach Il. I run my own board and music.
basically Roz-101 😀
or in other words what Roz did on Frazer Cranes Radio show
WOW at 1:11 minutes ....kind of rough on those buttons. But an interesting rundown what happens during a live production
Yes, Adrian…all equipment needs specialist maintenance and this one is no exception.
That's why I devoted myself to it on a large scale, during the time I spent working at radio stations. And that's also why I have a lot of broadcast equipment in my personal collection, all of it working properly.
Health to you, with wishes for a good 2023!
Unfortunately they don't take board management very seriously here anymore. I have heard that they used to have someone come in quarterly to deep clean/replace buttons if needed but they just don't do that anymore. Probably a cost cut kind of thing :/ This means that some of the buttons require more pressure than others to actually fire their assigned function.
Typical of iHeart, it's been published in industry blogs for the past few years about how they have been reducing everyone on staff by the thousands. Many stations don't have DJ's now and they have had plans on replacing mangement positions with AI.
Imagine if you will, back as recently as in the 90's, before consolidation, each station had a DJ doing a 4 hour shift and there would be different jocks on the weekend as well, 6 during the week and maybe up to 6 on the weekend, though some stations would use pre-recorded programs or national specialty shows to fill in some of that airtime (stations always try to cheap out on things, nothing has changed there). There would be someone working production, a traffic director (spot scheduling for those who don't know), a music director, Program director, Public Affairs Director, a Technical Director and sometimes a Chief Engineer (if the station was large enough) The sales department would consist of a few people, the Station Manager, business manager and even more depending on the size of the station. Since then conslidation happened and the mega station ownership groups began buying everything up and making clusters. Eventually 5 stations would exist in a space about the same as what was once 1. DJ's would get spread out to other duties on other stations, in many markets, all the dj's were pooled and many dismissed as it was cheaper to have one jock work several stations than the 5 it used to be (maybe not at first, it took time for these reductions to happen), voice tracking came along and made staff reductions along the mega owners even more possible by having 1 jock in LA be able to record the spots for many stations in the chain and run them via computer. In each of the "Clusters" the need for each of the other positions (TD, PD, MD, Sales, Managers, ect.) went the same way. No longer was the station manager working with 1 station, they would be working the cluster, or even deeper they came up regional positions where 1 person worked for groups of clusters, same for the other titled jobs. The only exception usually is in sales, but that's because of the turnaround in those positions, there's always sales jibs open in radio. (BTW: I left out a ton here, but it does give a general idea, and of course iHeart is the most notorious for blood letting amongst it's stations, just do some searches, it's nasty)
Looks so hard but probably once you get the hang it’s just a breeze lol
I'm about to start my job as a Board Operator at Salem Communications in Glendale.
I need all the help I can get.
Do you have a degree??
@Marcus-yn7bf In communications studies.
@@PhilipAJones do you have a 2yr or 4yr degree?? Im tryna get in radio or tv industry..
@@Marcus-yn7bf 4 Year, Bachelors degree.
Whoa, was this 91.1 The Globe?
Is music streamed from RUclips?
Lol
Interesting thank you
como chama mesa de som da radio ? .. vou monta uma radio pirata legal isso aqui só toca sertanejo a escuta musica rock . dualipa ariana taylo brasileira mpb .. as radio só fica no sertanejo ... muito linda
Nice video! You must be in a major market. Do you have to record and edit for break intros? Like if the host says something spectacular?
Sure, sometimes the host have me record things or find audio clips for them during a show break. A lot of this job is about timing and being quick with the software we work with. I think its pretty fun!
What make is the board in this video?
Harris RMX digital
I love this, I have a couple of questions to ask you.
What are your questions?
you know where can I study courses on line x board operator thanks!!
So what is this lady demonstrating? Is she playing the part of a "Radio Presenter" or a "producer"?! Because i think even a radio presenter can probably handle what she is doing when they are having a host in the studio!
Thank you for being able to say
“Important” and “button” correctly, instead of “impor-int” and “buh-IN.”
What radio console is it?
Harris RMX digital
@@radioxandra4410 Thanks a lot
Why in the world are you mashing the monitor select buttons on that console multiple times rapidly and very hard? Press gently, once. Thank you
hi can u tell me how to open online radio📻 in India thank u if u help
She sound more like producer then an Board Opt
Assistant producer is sometimes interchangeable
I wonder why all the radio broadcasting sections have girls?
IHeart = ICrap
Gideon Audio Bible App
Please oral Announcement
in radio studio
Hi I need to ask some questions about some new radio ideas.