Has radio voice tracking ruined local radio
Has radio voice tracking ruined local radio
I work 7am to 230pm ish most days.. id start later and be working till 7pm if i had to be live.. and id likely be doing 9 hour days .. but a few of the functions of my current job require me to be in studio at 7 and 8am so it'd be a partially split working day too which is never funAre you saying that your work day would be much longer than 7 to 7.5 hours if you did not have VT technology?
radiodiscussions.com
radiodiscussions.com
radiodiscussions.com
If something unplanned and exciting happens in your community, will it still be as exciting to the few listeners left in three days when you can finally mention it on the air? I guess no.
I might too if the salary were such as it was worth my time to stop what I am doing, go to where I have access to the computer and recut it. Sadly the voice tracking money is such that once my 20 minute session is over, I am casing the check and living my life. I give 110 percent to things I do, but never 112 percent. The money ain't worth itYou don't wait 3 days, that simple. I don't if something happens.. so what if i have t recut a voicetrack? i do it all the time
No. It has enhanced local radio.Has radio voice tracking ruined local radio
I cannot thank you enough for that simple and beautiful example of what technology can do to actually improve local radio in an era when radio, revenues and station evaluations are decreasing dramatically.No. It has enhanced local radio.
When I was coming up in radio, nearly all of the stations I worked for were attached to Satellite Music Network or similar 24/7 formats in a can. Back then, there was only local content on the air during AM drive with my newscasts, and a few PSA spots during the commercial breaks. Now there can be local content at any time.
Today, most of those stations have been sold and provide local programming with local voice trackers.
Yeah, it isn't live, but it sure beats another satellite jock having nothing more interesting to say than backselling records. And of course, the satellite jocks haven't been live in many years, so they are even more limited now than they were then.
The same tech that allows voice tracking also allows updates from the field. Back then, if I got a call from the sheriff that there was a large fire and US 460 was closed, I'd have to get up and go into the studio, and the fastest I could do that would be ~30 minutes. Today, I can upload that item to the automation much faster, because I can do it from my home.
Has radio voice tracking ruined local radio
Radio also doesn't have the "farm system" it once did.
The basic problem with voicetracking (and I agree with many of the positives outlined above) is also the basic problem with AI or any system automation: it removes workers from the workforce and doesn't replace them with an equivalent number of workers.
I might too if the salary were such as it was worth my time to stop what I am doing, go to where I have access to the computer and recut it. Sadly the voice tracking money is such that once my 20 minute session is over, I am casing the check and living my life. I give 110 percent to things I do, but never 112 percent. The money ain't worth it
The basic problem with voicetracking (and I agree with many of the positives outlined above) is also the basic problem with AI or any system automation: it removes workers from the workforce and doesn't replace them with an equivalent number of workers.
It is quite possible to make voice tracking sound like it's live and local though not everybody does it. The most legitimate criticism of voice tracking I've heard is that it takes away local jobs. But, if you took the voicetracking away today, radio station owners would not necessarily go out and hire a lot of local talent to fill the vacuum. Many would more likely than not would either try to sell the stations they own or just cancel their licenses entirely.
Voicetracking is a lot like AI (artificial intelligence) in that it does reduce the number of jobs available in radio. True, there is some need for people (engineers) to keep the voicetracking systems operating properly but the number of people needed to fill these slots will be far less than the number of people that voicetracking has (and will continue) to replace.
The basic problem with voicetracking (and I agree with many of the positives outlined above) is also the basic problem with AI or any system automation: it removes workers from the workforce and doesn't replace them with an equivalent number of workers.