Most automation will begin recording and play back as it comes up, typically continuing to record the news while playing it back.
You do have RCS that makes Selector and Zetta. With enough set up I bet it could do the Job. Then there is the issue of an instrumental at the end of each hour. Depending on your genre and format that might be tough. With that in mind it would be better to let the hour drift to better accomplish both if news is really needed. If you were live assist then you can hit the timed event like a network news feed.
Town Hall did the news on a station in Charlotte that I mentioned. They scheduled their music perfectly. Every single hour ended with the first few seconds of a song followed by the top of the hour station ID and whatever newscast there was. It wasn't Town Hall to begin with.I notice some small-town FM stations that still have network TOH news vary on whether they want to use the 1 to 2-minute availability, or the full 5-minute newscast. Is there any type of reasoning as to why some go with one length vs. the other?
SRN has a unique system. The news begins at :55 past the hour for the non-comms (Moody Radio NW is one that airs at this timeslot). Then another 5min. feed at :00, a 1-minute newscast at :53, and another newscast at :30. I believe :55 is live and :00 is taped as the SRN personalities (Rich Thomason, Bob Agnew, etc.) read the TownHall.com newscast at the top of the hour. Correct me if I'm wrong.
The DJ said the pips are coming up and that's the most important thing we do.The pips are still fairly common in Europe. I can even get you an example in Luxembourgish if you really want it. (In my recording, the RTL local service faded the song - Alphaville's Sounds Like a Melody - down before the top of the hour.)
How many major market music stations these days have news at the TOH?
Automation will play whatever you want, whenever you want it. You have three choices: time all the music to end exactly at the TOH, have the automation fade music out whenever the timed event is scheduled, or as I mentioned, some will stretch or shrink the song before the timed event to hit it on the nose.
But is there really much of an excuse, either, in our modern computer-driven world? Also no.
There's zero financial benefit to making an automation system hit the TOH for a newcast, so why bother? Because your old boss wanted you to? Because a handful combination of board ops from the 70's and radio nerds still care? Get real.
I'll bet that 99.999% of anyone who cares about such a thing wouldn't go out of their way to spend one cent at a station sponsor, or donate to a station who hit the TOH with news.
I am aware of how most automation systems currently work and have worked with music schedulers.True (in fact, I think all the automation software out there can do that now), but AMRadioGuy wants the automation to somehow act as an on-the-fly music scheduler instead ... 🙄
The whole, one system for traffic, one system for music, then lets merge those logs together along with a generic template into something for a separate automation playout system seems... antiquated to me.
I don't know how accurate the clock is in the car I was driving today, but precisely as the little kid said "My gwampa's favowite station" and did the legal station ID, the clock changed from 2:59 to 3:00 and the anchor said, "CBS News on the hour."
I've noticed that with KCBS. I never noticed before, but it seems like in the past couple of years, the network news segment (which, by the way, happens within seconds of the TOH on KCBS) has gotten shorter than I remember.WBBM Chicago, a CBS affiliate, does the same for a majority of hours of the day. What had been a 5 minute 30 second newscast (before that 6 minutes, before that 10!) is taken down to 2:30 or 3:00 or so, including the network ad. That rarely happened when CBS owned WBBM, though the CBS World News Roundup routinely lost its last segment, as did The World Tonight / World News Roundup Evening. And still does.
It's incredible that it's been over two decades since 9/11. I remember that sad, terrible day as if it were yesterday!Clear Channel would have news under their own label. It was big especially after 9/11. But that was more than 2 decades ago.
That happened on KCBS about 10 years ago, before CBS sold off its radio division to Audacy. Presumably this is to allow more time for the local news segments. KCBS still carries the first 8 minutes of the World News Roundup at 7 am and the first 7 minutes at 4 pm.I've noticed that with KCBS. I never noticed before, but it seems like in the past couple of years, the network news segment (which, by the way, happens within seconds of the TOH on KCBS) has gotten shorter than I remember.
Clear Channel would have news under their own label.
I'll get even nitpickier. Let's look at the original quote:[nitpick mode on]
That syntax is something that drives me crazy, and it's all over Wikipedia.
"Would have" is a phrase that applies only if something was considered but not implemented. If it actually happened, the correct way to state it is by use of the past tense.
Going back to the start of the Iraq War in 2003/2004 was probably the last time many music stations had TOH news every hour. It still happens in AMs and rarely, afternoon drive but never at other times. Clear Channel would have news under their own label. It was big especially after 9/11. But that was more than 2 decades ago.
While awkward, the use of "would" is actually proper in this instance if the intent is to describe something that used to occur, but which no longer does.
I wonder how one would visually represent the speeded-up (sped-up?) audio typical of the disclaimers on radio commercials.While technically correct, it sounds wrong and using the past tense is clearer. IMHO, YMMV, batteries not included, Member FDIC.