nmoore6676 said:Back then (in the 70's and before) the rules were rather more complicated, calling for ID's at the top and bottom of the hour, within a two minute window surrounding the times, if I recall correctly. The only exceptions was for programming which could not be broken, like classical music, but you couldn't get around that just by starting something right before the window began, you had to start it after an ID was given within the window.
Now most stations us imaging names which are used constantly, and the legal ID gets buried at the top of the hour where you have to pick it out of all the hype. Also the rim shots near a major city usually include the big city name after the city of license, as required, but the major city is always louder and more prominent
AFAIK, there was NEVER a bottom of the hour ID requirement in the 70s
Robert Bass said:IIRC the time window was extended, if not eliminated. You just have to do it as close as you can, during a natural break. Kinda makes it difficult when you're doing a sports broadcast that has no natural break for almost a half hour, with a delay in place from remotes over the Internet.
R
CW said:Piisshhh!!! Cmon Robert, its not that hard to say KEOM, Mesquite is it???Takes less than ONE second to say a legal ID..MOST remotes will do that anyway "Lets take time out for station identification, This is the Cowboy Radio Network"
ISUcyclone said:There is no time requirement:
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/...cess.gpo.gov/cfr_2006/octqtr/47cfr73.1201.htm
From 47 CFR 73.1201
(a) When regularly required. Broadcast station identification
announcements shall be made:
(1) At the beginning and ending of each time of operation, and
(2) Hourly, as close to the hour as feasible, at a natural break in
program offerings. Television and Class A television broadcast stations
may make these announcements visually or aurally.
etc...
For a sports broadcast the legal ID can be made during the closest commercial break or done directly by the announcer. Also, no delay is going to be long enough that it would make any fundamental difference. 15 seconds maybe (20 if you're running HD).
Robert Bass said:ISUcyclone said:There is no time requirement:
http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/...cess.gpo.gov/cfr_2006/octqtr/47cfr73.1201.htm
From 47 CFR 73.1201
(a) When regularly required. Broadcast station identification
announcements shall be made:
(1) At the beginning and ending of each time of operation, and
(2) Hourly, as close to the hour as feasible, at a natural break in
program offerings. Television and Class A television broadcast stations
may make these announcements visually or aurally.
etc...
For a sports broadcast the legal ID can be made during the closest commercial break or done directly by the announcer. Also, no delay is going to be long enough that it would make any fundamental difference. 15 seconds maybe (20 if you're running HD).
HA! I was just about to post that information regarding station ID's. Ya beat me to it! ;D
To understand how the delay can be a problem, you must have an understanding of how the remote equipment works. Even though this service is no longer available in the U.S., let's look at the problems a delay can create with respect to running the legal ID during a sports broadcast, when using a wireless cell phone Codec.
Unlike POTS line Codecs such as the Comrex Matrix / Vector systems, wireless Codecs have a delay anywhere from 8 to 12 seconds. Let's say in this example, the delay is 10 seconds. Now let's say I give the sportscasters a cue to send it back for the ID. It will take 10 seconds for them to hear my cue. Then when they actually give the cue, it will be 10 seconds before I hear it. Then when I fire the ID, it will be 10 seconds before they hear it. Thus, it creates a bit of confusion for the sportscasters, because of the round trip delay time of 20 seconds!
R
CW said:Football game, etc......game play game play game play, Banter between color and commentator.....then one of them says: KXYZ Bumuck...
There! The ID is done in less than a second.....who said you HAVE to go back to the studio for it.....noone....
The TOH is merely the callsign and COL.......period.....can be said by ANYONE in the program.....just as long as its near the TOH......doing 10 secs for an ID because delay? Yeah I can see wasting the time but thats because you want the studios to play the ID and cue back to the remote? Nothing in the rules says it has to be done that way....In fact a number of remotes I did, we did exactly that...the remote talent did the ID of the station in the middle of conversation.....no biggie...
semoochie said:In answer to the original question, the FCC used to require a half-hour ID. One station I worked for gave them throughout the 70s and beyond! I think it may have been changed at the same time FM simulcasts were limited to 50% of their AM counterparts or around 1969.
(and then it gives the exceptions for interrupting a sporting event/concert/etc..)A licensee of a standard broadcast station shall make station identification announcement (call letters and location) at the beginning and ending of each time of operation and during operation (1) on the hour and (2) eithe ron the half hour or at the quarter hour preceding the next hour: Provided.
semoochie said:In answer to the original question, the FCC used to require a half-hour ID. One station I worked for gave them throughout the 70s and beyond! I think it may have been changed at the same time FM simulcasts were limited to 50% of their AM counterparts or around 1969.
w9wi said:I would believe a 1969 date for the modern legal ID rules.
w9wi said:
- For all other programs, a 2-minute grace period was specified.
73.117 applied only to AM stations, but there was essentially identical wording in 73.287 for FM. Strangely enough, the rule was different for TV, with no half-hour ID required.
I would believe a 1969 date for the modern legal ID rules.