Just don't try to use the campus wi-fiStart a popular channel on TikTok from your bedroom/dorm, get discovered, or become an influencer.
I agree entirely. I had never completed High School, and went directly into station management and ownership at age 18. I ran stations until I was in my mid-20's when I became a consultant... giving me free time to go to college.I would not, in any capacity, use education as a pathway to a broadcasting career. Careers in broadcasting are already touch and go at best, and if you’re going to invest in your education, you may as well spend the money on something with a brighter future.
Labor laws make hanging around a station difficult today. Before going into ownership, I had worked part-time as a go-fer, but it is hard to "hang around" and internships are restrictive and usually require a university supervision.I never set foot in any broadcasting school. Instead, I worked with a small market radio station that let me come in (knowing nothing) and learn everything on the job. I was lucky enough to meet some people with many years of experience in the industry who showed me how radio should be done.
With so many stations fully automated and using program services, there is little depth of staff locally, and larger stations have severe liability and HR restriction on off-the-street part timers.I feel like I learned far more from that experience compared to what I could have learned in a classroom. I was terrible at it initially, but I volunteered my time for a while and tried to learn everything I could. I also got to spend way more time practicing than someone in broadcasting school would (where you have to share airtime with so many other people).
My wife went to the historic Don Martin school in Hollywood, and her course was very complete based on what she has detailed to me. But they told he she was unlikely to have a successful career...In my personal opinion, I don’t think broadcasting school makes someone a better broadcaster or gives them a leg up over anybody else. I’ve seen plenty of examples of people who graduated from broadcasting school who don’t seem qualified at all to be on the air.
It's more than a show today... it is integrating live radio with streaming, added features and even podcasts. And it requires offering some kind of special personality or knowledge that makes you stand out from thousands of stations and streams.If I’m ever crazy enough to try and get back into radio, I don’t think having a broadcasting degree (or lack thereof) is going to impact me in the slightest. Rather, they’ll want to see that I’m capable of delivering a show and have shown I can do it. Fortunately for me, it’s a skill that I didn’t have to pay for (other than the time out of my day to practice).
In my personal opinion, I don’t think broadcasting school makes someone a better broadcaster or gives them a leg up over anybody else. I’ve seen plenty of examples of people who graduated from broadcasting school who don’t seem qualified at all to be on the air.
As an aside, does anyone here recall the former "Columbia School of Broadcasting"? I looked them up (see link below) and it appears they had several locations, all of which closed in the late 1980s - early 1990s, but I remember seeing their commercials a fair amount as a kid, always on second-rate UHF stations, trying to sell people on how they could teach them to have a successful future in the "exciting career of radio broadcasting". If recall correctly, at least part of it was a correspondence course. I knew one person older than me who went there. She ended up getting a part-time gig at a Top40 station after graduation (her dad also pulled some strings to get her the job) and after floundering for several months, she left that to become a bartender which speaks volumes. One of my first PDs had visited one of their facilities and said the equipment and systems they were training on were older and not in great condition, the "faculty" weren't the best and they were charging a lot of $$ vs. what students actually got from the program.My wife went to the historic Don Martin school in Hollywood, and her course was very complete based on what she has detailed to me. But they told he she was unlikely to have a successful career...
... she became a TV morning news anchor in LA and was mid-day jock on several important stations, including 50 kw KTNQ. Later, she was creator of, PD of and midday host on the LA-Based Recuerdo Network of major market Spanish adult hits stations.
I mention that because not all courses understand the job market nor do they provide much employment help. With the change from "radio" to multi-faceted radio, streaming and podcast situations, few industry veterans help in understanding the new media environment.
Not affiliated with CBS. (WKRP spoofed their commercials with "The Mike Wallace School of Broadcasting. Not affiliated with the guy on 60 Minutes")As an aside, does anyone here recall the former "Columbia School of Broadcasting"? I looked them up (see link below) and it appears they had several locations, all of which closed in the late 1980s - early 1990s, but I remember seeing their commercials a fair amount as a kid, always on second-rate UHF stations, trying to sell people on how they could teach them to have a successful future in the "exciting career of radio broadcasting". If recall correctly, at least part of it was a correspondence course. I knew one person older than me who went there. She ended up getting a part-time gig at a Top40 station after graduation (her dad also pulled some strings to get her the job) and after floundering for several months, she left that to become a bartender which speaks volumes. One of my first PDs had visited one of their facilities and said the equipment and systems they were training on were older and not in great condition, the "faculty" weren't the best and they were charging a lot of $$ vs. what students actually got from the program.
Columbia School Of Broadcasting Home Study 19 Campuses Closing Information
Columbia School Of Broadcasting Home Study 19 Campuses have been closed and no longer accept new applications.www.collegeevaluator.com
Labor laws make hanging around a station difficult today. Before going into ownership, I had worked part-time as a go-fer, but it is hard to "hang around" and internships are restrictive and usually require a university supervision.
Unless it gets banned nationally. Besides, as a substitute teacher, (hopefully this fall) turned full-time elementary teacher, TikTok is a terrible influence on children, and lax parenting isn't helping either. Saw a NYT survey somewhere that said the average tween is spending 2 hours on TikTok and almost 2 on Instagram/YouTube. The challenges that ask them to destroy school bathrooms or put a paper bag over a random stranger at the grocery store? Whatever happened to, I don't know, creativity and love of learning? Rant over.Start a popular channel on TikTok from your bedroom/dorm, get discovered, or become an influencer.
It was a different one, but similar. And the paycheck lotto was real, for sure.So you played Bailey Lotto too? You know when the pay checks came out and we would all run to the bank.
I don't think there's a program at KVTI anymore. I remember picking up that station at my aunt's house in 2008 and deciding that that's where I wanted to go to college. I was also considering University of Puget Sound, but really wanted to be at KVTI because that's a station that I would actually listen to outside of my time at the station as it was doing CHR. By the time I was ready to apply though, the station had gone NWPR, and I learned that they were no longer offering broadcasting classes. I wound up at Edmonds College doing computer support, and eventually Clark, where I'm in the final stages of a CP in web development. I hear the company that makes Pro Tools is interested in improving the accessibility of their products, so that's where I'm going to try and apply.Go to Green River, or KVTI, if they are still part of a program.