And I'll bet someone is going to tell me that this (poor) quality of audio, such as it is, is "the new normal".Dan and the Total Traffic reporters are broadcasting from their homes due to Covid.
And I'll bet someone is going to tell me that this (poor) quality of audio, such as it is, is "the new normal".Dan and the Total Traffic reporters are broadcasting from their homes due to Covid.
And I'll bet someone is going to tell me that this (poor) quality of audio, such as it is, is "the new normal".
We see things differently. Go back and look at all your posts.You have some examples?
Most of these companies Covid rules don't allow anyone to go into folks homes. So your hearing what could be quickly grabbed and given to a person to have them set-up at home to get on the air. Often a Comrex and a headset with a non technical person. Sometimes an App on a phone. It was all meant to be temporary. This does not include Grace who is in a studio as you can see in her video streams.And I'll bet someone is going to tell me that this (poor) quality of audio, such as it is, is "the new normal".
In my limited exposure to the inner workings of companies in Southern California (Limited because many companies don't make their future plans public) I have seen everything from radio stations planning to or already having completed moves to much smaller facilities to insurance brokers reducing office space by having those who don't deal with the public work from home.Most companies are preparing their staffs to return to the office this summer. Providing they get vaccinated.
We see things differently. Go back and look at all your posts.
Lots of radio groups... even smaller ones... during the pandemic, have found that there is no need to do commercial logs locally and that work can be done either from home or from states with lower staff costs.
I fully expect "a Comrex and a headset" or "an app on a phone" to sound like crud, but, since you tell me Grace is in a real studio somewhere, then either she needs a better microphone and/or a better codec for the audio, because her audio is not at all clear. I know Dan Rea has been broadcasting from home for about a year now, but dang, sometimes it's as if his Comrex or his app (whichever) are just not running properly. Funny, Rush Limbaugh operated from "sunny South Florida" for years without any degraded audio quality; it was as if he were in a studio at "network headquarters".Most of these companies Covid rules don't allow anyone to go into folks homes. So your hearing what could be quickly grabbed and given to a person to have them set-up at home to get on the air. Often a Comrex and a headset with a non technical person. Sometimes an App on a phone. It was all meant to be temporary. This does not include Grace who is in a studio as you can see in her video streams.
Haven't we moaned and groaned enough here on how awful the audio on three of the AM stations - WBZ, WRKO, WXKS-AM - is, or that we're getting dead air or audio-overlapping-audio? And then there's the issue on the latter two stations of audio-past-its-usage-date, since some much ballyhooed automation system is running things and most likely NO ONE is actually monitoring on-air content.(To TheBigA): Oh, you mean like you constantly rant and rave about how good they are? I guess the rest of us who have a different opinion can't say so, ok, I get it.
In my limited exposure to the inner workings of companies in Southern California (Limited because many companies don't make their future plans public) I have seen everything from radio stations planning to or already having completed moves to much smaller facilities to insurance brokers reducing office space by having those who don't deal with the public work from home.
C'mon man, those of us who point out the ridiculous, avoidable mishaps don't know what we're talking about. We're outnumbered by those who are blinded by their arrogance and their need to abase the rest of us.Haven't we moaned and groaned enough here on how awful the audio on three of the AM stations - WBZ, WRKO, WXKS-AM - is, or that we're getting dead air or audio-overlapping-audio? And then there's the issue on the latter two stations of audio-past-its-usage-date, since some much ballyhooed automation system is running things and most likely NO ONE is actually monitoring on-air content.
Once the environmentalists seize on this, there will be considerable additional promotion of telecommuting due to the reduction of commuting and reduced expenditures on office A/C and heating, etc .It's a huge win for businesses that can make it work. They reduce their overhead expenses (office leases, infrastructure costs such as electricity, etc.) while transferring the cost of doing business from their bottom line to the bottom line of their employees (my electric bill is substantially higher w/ my wife and I working from home, and we had to upgrade our internet service to a faster speed. S
But that was because he had a studio, complete with gold plated mikes and good acoustics, that was as good as or better than the network ones.Funny, Rush Limbaugh operated from "sunny South Florida" for years without any degraded audio quality; it was as if he were in a studio at "network headquarters".
I think some of this is due to the very reduced 2020 revenues as well some more due to the COVID restrictions on working in a station studio. If this becomes the new normal, then some new approaches will have to be made for control and supervision....or that we're getting dead air or audio-overlapping-audio? And then there's the issue on the latter two stations of audio-past-its-usage-date, since some much ballyhooed automation system is running things and most likely NO ONE is actually monitoring on-air content.
Two of the largest broadcast groups in LA are reducing office and studio space. Several more have consolidated traffic, billing and accounting in central locations already and several others are doing this now.That may be, but the groups I talk to believe that they are in a collaborative business, and their business is better when their employees work together in the same space. They believe sales are better when their salespeople make human contact with customers. In other words, the drive isn't only to save money, but to increase productivity and build team morale. They're planning company softball teams and company gatherings.
I don't see all that many people in LA or SF or other congested cities wanting to commute to work. Yes, they may want to get out to parks and the beaches or the mountains or Disneyland, but spending an hour or more each way in traffic is not something most of us want to get back to.California in particular is a state where a lot of people have fought against the restrictions. They've seen their lifestyle hurt by all this work-at-home. They are mobile people and they want to engage with each other. What you're talking about may affect a small percentage, but the people I talk to are ready to get out of the house. They're getting vaccinated, and see late summer as the day we get back to normal.
David,Broadcast automation systems have existed since the 60's. Ever since then, most errors are due to the input of data by people, not to equipment deficiencies or failures.
Even worse - when some if us call attention to that here, it’s usually written off, due to personnel cuts, or revenue shortcomings, or the pandemic.
www.gazettenet.com
I am NOT asking for anyone to be fired; I'm asking that the stations assume a responsibility to assure a quality on-air signal.Aren't those reasonable responses? My cable TV and internet drop out or lock up all the time. I don't call them demanding someone get fired or even that I get a rebate on my bill.