I do. I'd rather watch Dick Clark's skeleton hosting. They can have an A.I. do his voice.I have no objection to his showing up on New Year's Eve in Times Square.
I do. I'd rather watch Dick Clark's skeleton hosting. They can have an A.I. do his voice.I have no objection to his showing up on New Year's Eve in Times Square.
I’d rather watch Geoff the Skeleton from the Craig Ferguson Late Late Show hosting….I do. I'd rather watch Dick Clark's skeleton hosting. They can have an A.I. do his voice.
I’d rather watch Geoff the Skeleton from the Craig Ferguson Late Late Show hosting….
The corporate head of programming explains the policy: No AI generated music or personalities
Will they "guarantee" that all the commercials will be voiced by humans? I smell a lawsuit.
For decades, most of those types of “listener” shout-outs have been voice actors or off-air employees (sales, continuity, etc.).I am curious if those ID sweepers are really humans or AI. Like for example, we have a lot of "listener testimonial" sweepers on 100.9 Cherry FM (KARY) in Yakima. "I wake up every Saturday with the Super 70s!" "We listen to it at work." "I love listening to Tony Lorino every night." "It's the soundtrack of my life." etc etc etc... For a while they had random shoutouts from each of the cities that the station serves. Including Ellensburg...which I can tell you is NOT in the grade A coverage area. It's nowhere near listenable. Yet someone chirps, "Ellensburg LOVES listening to the classic hits..." doesn't sound anywhere near organic to me! unless that person is a rancher high up on the hill, way north of town...
I assume these are NOT random people on the street that were interviewed by the station on why they love the station.
Strangely enough, their sister country station, 104.1 KXDD, has listener shoutouts that are genuine. Name and city.
The oldies station where I live does the same thing,I am curious if those ID sweepers are really humans or AI. Like for example, we have a lot of "listener testimonial" sweepers on 100.9 Cherry FM (KARY) in Yakima. "I wake up every Saturday with the Super 70s!" "We listen to it at work." "I love listening to Tony Lorino every night." "It's the soundtrack of my life." etc etc etc... For a while they had random shoutouts from each of the cities that the station serves. Including Ellensburg...which I can tell you is NOT in the grade A coverage area. It's nowhere near listenable. Yet someone chirps, "Ellensburg LOVES listening to the classic hits..." doesn't sound anywhere near organic to me! unless that person is a rancher high up on the hill, way north of town...
I assume these are NOT random people on the street that were interviewed by the station on why they love the station.
Strangely enough, their sister country station, 104.1 KXDD, has listener shoutouts that are genuine. Name and city.
And many of them come from production libraries. You'll note most of these montages exclude station branding. Or, at least they do where I mostly listen, outside the top 100 markets.For decades, most of those types of “listener” shout-outs have been voice actors or off-air employees (sales, continuity, etc.).
He was my 2nd choice.I’d rather watch Geoff the Skeleton from the Craig Ferguson Late Late Show hosting….
I've noticed that also. Knew they were fake when they played them when station was never mentioned once and then when I hear the same damn sweep on a station from a nearby town, just had the "respondents" in a different order. Need to do one: "I listen to this station 24/7 no matter what their format currently is as they play the music I'm most likely to ignore whenever my scan button stops on the station."And many of them come from production libraries. You'll note most of these montages exclude station branding. Or, at least they do where I mostly listen, outside the top 100 markets.
Person 1: "I love this music"
Person 2: "This is my station at work"
Person 3: "I listen in my office every day"
Jingle: #1 At Work! Lite 97.3
“I’m afraid I can’t do that, Dave.”This is what many don’t grasp about AI, as they think humans will ultimately still be running things. Much more likely the AI will run itself, without any humans involved.
We are heading into a world where humans are becoming increasingly unnecessary and irrelevant.
That is sort of a contrived phrase. But the program consultant to Acir is from Texas and with iHeart to it seems logical.Grupo Acir, Radio Comunicación Humana
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BattleBots 2.0.A robot killing a robot. That would be worth a listen.
This past week, the music industry’s three largest labels—Universal, Warner Bros., and Sony—all inked new licensing deals with AI music streaming service “Klay.” The AI music platform allows users to create and remix licensed music from the comfort of their phones, computers, or makeshift studios—literally anywhere.