It's easy on a music station but some nighttime talk shows are surely cut short by an hour in the Spring and an hour longer in the Fall.
It's easy on a music station but some nighttime talk shows are surely cut short by an hour in the Spring and an hour longer in the Fall.
Typically the syndicator makes the adjustment (since most talk stations run syndicated talk after midnight).
This mainly becomes a problem in states that don't adjust for DST.
I'm asking what specifically is done. Is there an extra hour not aired in March that gets added in November?Typically the syndicator makes the adjustment (since most talk stations run syndicated talk after midnight).
This mainly becomes a problem in states that don't adjust for DST.
How do syndicators accommodate their Arizona and Hawaii affiliates?
I'm asking what specifically is done. Is there an extra hour not aired in March that gets added in November?
CTListener said:How do syndicators accommodate their Arizona and Hawaii affiliates? Is filler programming provided or are the affiliates on their own to run music, PSAs or "please stand by" loops for an hour?
We used to have this problem in Indiana. Large stations in Indiana would tape delay their syndicated programming by an hour during winter, so the schedule would be the same all year. Those stations would start their recording equipment an hour before the switch, and re-rack that hour of programming and air it again to fill the missing hour.
Many smaller stations would stay with whatever the satellite provided, messing up their program schedule by an hour.
To vchimp's main question, for the most part during "fall back", syndicators will insert an extra best-of hour of programs. Since there isn't much live radio happening at 2am on Sunday morning, it's pretty easy to tell the computer to play an extra hour of archived programs. Whether that is airing the same show twice, both times that 2am occurs, or something unique will vary from show to show.
Works for "Wait! Wait!" on NPR. When they take a week off. They may not do a whole hour of previously unaired material, but they sometimes do a lot.There's a very lengthy discussion about this on the Phoenix board from last spring.
I assume it varies from show to show. But they don't save an hour for 6 months. That wouldn't work for news/talk.
My guess is that Hawaii and Puerto Rico don't observe DST due to their tropical locations.
My guess is that Hawaii and Puerto Rico don't observe DST due to their tropical locations. I'm told that much of Saskatchewan doesn't observe it either. It must be really fun on time change weekends for Llyodminster, AB/SK! (They're like the Bristol or Texarkana of Canada, in the city split-in-two jurisdictions kind of way.)
My guess is that Hawaii and Puerto Rico don't observe DST due to their tropical locations. I'm told that much of Saskatchewan doesn't observe it either. It must be really fun on time change weekends for Llyodminster, AB/SK! (They're like the Bristol or Texarkana of Canada, in the city split-in-two jurisdictions kind of way.)
I would prefer to be on daylight time all year, but still remain in the central time zone.
I'm with you on DST. I've seen some proposals that suggest merging the 4 time zones in the Continental US into two - east and west of the the Mississippi, I think.
Seems to me if we had either ST or DST all year long individuals and businesses would adapt. In the summertime if I can get home in time to enjoy a few hours of daylight I don't care if it's from 5 to 8 pm or 6 to 9 pm.
Puerto Rico is on AST. It is too far south for DST to be practical. Obviously, the nations between the Topic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn have sunrise and sunset times that are nearly identical every day of the year, so DST is not needed.
Yet Cuba observes DST and switches the same dates we U.S. imperialists do for some reason. Only difference is they switched at 1am this morning instead of 2 (yes, I listened to the change on Radio Reloj).
Some other places would have VERY early sunrises...as early as 4:15am with sunset around 7pm in the summer. Forget grilling, yard work or any outdoor activity after work. You'd have to squeeze that all in on the weekend. A sunrise in the 4am or 5am hour would be totally lost on me in the summer.
But suppose instead of working from 8 am to 5 pm you worked from 6 am to 3 pm. You'd have the same time available for all those activities. That's my point ... let individuals and businesses adjust to the time, whatever it is, rather than trying to change it. Unlike in 1974, many businesses today are offering flexible hours and would likely be open to schedules that worked best for their employees.