I listen to this station every morning and I can hear the ID perfectly. Maybe it’s just something on your end?Wondering why I can't hear ANY calls, or even the word "Bellevue" in the Movin' TOH. I get that some stations bury the ID but it just seems weird that they will gladly air run-on legal disclaimers, but apparently consider calls to be an embarrassment!
Actually, that's a problem for me. A childhood ear infection left me with hardly any highs in my left ear. To this day, most women's voices turn into a muffled mush when the woman (or audio source) is on my left. At work, I made sure any female coworker seated near me was on my right. All things considered, I don't consider this a handicap. I can't hear annoying birds chirping while I'm trying to sleep, nor do buzzing mosquitoes make any sound so long as I'm sleeping on my right side.They'd have to be deaf above 4,000 Hz to not hear this. And if they are, they're missing one helluva lot more than a legal ID in Seattle.
".. tonight at 530 on KSKO after alaska news nightly". i say that so much that after someone says "all things considered" thats the next thing that comes to mind immediatelyAll things considered
Actually, that's a problem for me. A childhood ear infection left me with hardly any highs in my left ear. To this day, most women's voices turn into a muffled mush when the woman (or audio source) is on my left. At work, I made sure any female coworker seated near me was on my right. All things considered, I don't consider this a handicap. I can't hear annoying birds chirping while I'm trying to sleep, nor do buzzing mosquitoes make any sound so long as I'm sleeping on my right side.
Yeah, when I was at CapRadio, that was a thing for me too. If I said it in conversation, the phrase was always followed by:".. tonight at 530 on KSKO after alaska news nightly". i say that so much that after someone says "all things considered" thats the next thing that comes to mind immediately
The Bellevue part of it is spoken so fast that it almost sounded like "W" to me, but I could clearly hear "KQMV" and the other cities. My hearing isn't so wonderful either, thanks to sitting next to too many police and fire scanners 40-45 years ago.I can hear what Lance hears..."KQMV, Bellevue-Seattle-Tacoma".
I hear "KQMBell-U-Seal-acoma". It sounds like they used digital time compression on what was already a recording of someone talking fast, and the result is missing parts of syllables and comes out garbled.
It's been a while since I've seen updated research, but 'community mentions' test well with listeners. A couple stations I worked at we had rolling ID's which started with the community of license, then every hour we would mix up other communities in the area after the licensed community.But if you're going to rush it to the point of near-unintelligibility, then why bother to add on extra cities that aren't part of the legal ID? Just say "KQMV Bellevue" and be done with it.
Same as stations changing the towns they give current temperatures for at the end of their weather breaks. It's easy to do, and nobody's going to hold your feet to the fire if you fake them; you're giving your listeners in those places a sense that the station knows you're there and cares about you. I remember being told by a jock at a station in Syracuse that her station never actually checked the weather in Manlius, Liverpool, Skaneateles, etc. They just added or subtracted one to three degrees from the official temperature at the Syracuse airport, making sure no two places in any one update had the same temp.It's been a while since I've seen updated research, but 'community mentions' test well with listeners. A couple stations I worked at we had rolling ID's which started with the community of license, then every hour we would mix up other communities in the area after the licensed community.
In this case, it would be: KQMV/Bellevue, Kirkland, Tacoma. The following hour it might be KQMV/Bellevue, Dreadful (Federal) Way, Kent, Auburn. The next hour might be: KQMV/Bellevue, Monroe, Edmonds. Etc...
KPNW Did this during its short lived appearanceIt's been a while since I've seen updated research, but 'community mentions' test well with listeners. A couple stations I worked at we had rolling ID's which started with the community of license, then every hour we would mix up other communities in the area after the licensed community.
In this case, it would be: KQMV/Bellevue, Kirkland, Tacoma. The following hour it might be KQMV/Bellevue, Dreadful (Federal) Way, Kent, Auburn. The next hour might be: KQMV/Bellevue, Monroe, Edmonds. Etc...
It's been a while since I've seen updated research, but 'community mentions' test well with listeners.
Seems like only the OP had issues with hearing the TOH. Hey, I've got an idea! Let's do the typical Internet thing and start the rumor that if you play the attached KQMV TOA ID backward, it says: 'I killed AAA in Seattle'.Same as stations changing the towns they give current temperatures for at the end of their weather breaks. It's easy to do, and nobody's going to hold your feet to the fire if you fake them; you're giving your listeners in those places a sense that the station knows you're there and cares about you. I remember being told by a jock at a station in Syracuse that her station never actually checked the weather in Manlius, Liverpool, Skaneateles, etc. They just added or subtracted one to three degrees from the official temperature at the Syracuse airport, making sure no two places in any one update had the same temp.
The locals know it as Felony Way. LOLIt's been a while since I've seen updated research, but 'community mentions' test well with listeners. A couple stations I worked at we had rolling ID's which started with the community of license, then every hour we would mix up other communities in the area after the licensed community.
In this case, it would be: KQMV/Bellevue, Kirkland, Tacoma. The following hour it might be KQMV/Bellevue, Dreadful (Federal) Way, Kent, Auburn. The next hour might be: KQMV/Bellevue, Monroe, Edmonds. Etc...
I used to just subtract a degree, read out the three random settlements in the coverage patch, and then add a degree for "and here at the studios, it's...". It's always a bit hotter in the town.f
Same as stations changing the towns they give current temperatures for at the end of their weather breaks. It's easy to do, and nobody's going to hold your feet to the fire if you fake them; you're giving your listeners in those places a sense that the station knows you're there and cares about you. I remember being told by a jock at a station in Syracuse that her station never actually checked the weather in Manlius, Liverpool, Skaneateles, etc. They just added or subtracted one to three degrees from the official temperature at the Syracuse airport, making sure no two places in any one update had the same temp.