Bill Wolfenbarger said:Automating ball games is pretty simple. Compass Media Networks proved that to me during football season. We ran a couple of dozen games without a board op. All one needs to do it have a fixed number of timed local breaks. It's smoother than a board op. And cheaper.
CorporateSuit said:Excuse me? LA is a totally different sports beast that Seattle, but the talent level at KLAC surpasses anything KJR has on the air.
Superdeluxe said:CorporateSuit said:Excuse me? LA is a totally different sports beast that Seattle, but the talent level at KLAC surpasses anything KJR has on the air.
Softy in the past has had a national Saturday gig for Fox Sports Radio, as well as filling in for some of the national syndicated hosts on Fox sports radio. I am sure he has gotten a ton of offers from much larger sports radio stations
Mitch in the Morning was offered, and accepted the Fox Sports Radio National Morning show years back, but declined it because he wanted to stay and live in Seattle. (I'm sure he got a nice pay raise from that as well).
Minimum Wage board op alone at the station invites laziness, sleeping in the studio, unless you get a die hard fan of the sports you cover. DTMF tones can be generated by a cell phone, to command the DTMF decoder, have a normal phone line installed at the studio or maybe use a spare line temporarily for games, then the listeners won't hear the tones. You would want a DTMF decoder with a PIN # login so accidental calls to that line won't trip the automation to: Next event. Your automation manufacturer may have an add on for remote control if you don't have one.GenXRadio said:Ok so then there would have to be a network tone sent to kick the automation in then right?
Even then I think spending minimum wage to have someone run the board for a game and get content you can use the rest of the week is money well spent.
You can just log into the automation computer over the internet then and control everything right there at the game, no need for relays as it would all be on the hard drive, you would just have to be your own board op to save $ Remember PC anywhere?notalent said:Shocking to some, but Automation systems have progressed since the 80's.
No, Nobody uses the right audio channel for cue tones, subaudible tones a relic these days.
Now there are optically isolated relay closures on a separate dedicated channel, and they even include closures for rain delay in baseball, nascar etc. And yes, there is a corresponding closure for resumption of play/race etc. as well as end of game, local break, end of break, TOH ID, etc.
Fully automated sporting events are quite common even in the largest markets.
Since KJR AM just got a new networked audio system it makes sense that they would be trying get that working to its maximum efficiency.
So why would one shell out all that money on a networked automation system if they still got to pay someone to run the board? The complaint is dead air on KJR, and I am just kicking some ideas around, you need to share your tricks this is an open forum after all.notalent said:You might do that in Wenatchee, but not at KJR pal.
notalent said:You might do that in Wenatchee, but not at KJR pal.
Bill Wolfenbarger said:notalent said:You might do that in Wenatchee, but not at KJR pal.
Don't kid yourself. There are major market clusters out there with nobody home. Even networks with hundreds and hundreds of affiliates sometimes, especially on the weekend.