• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Obsolete Terms Still Used on Radio & TV: Name One!

I'd heard that used on University of Tennessee football as well.
And on hockey broadcasts. If it's a team without a network of stations, it gives the announcer another opportunity to promote the stand-alone station carrying the games. Chuck Kaiton, the voice of the Hartford Whalers, used to tell his listeners that the Whalers were "skating from left to right across your WTIC radio dial."
 
Old phrases die hard. We still call interviews recorded in advance "pre-tapes" when talking to each other in the newsroom. The TV term VO/SOT literally stands for "Voice-Over/Sound on Tape".
Or all graphics are called "Chyron". One of the Millenial producers where I used to work wrote me about a month after I started asking where our Chyron's all had the latest software versions. My response was that we didn't have any Chyron brand graphics systems, so not sure what he was asking.
 
Or all graphics are called "Chyron". One of the Millenial producers where I used to work wrote me about a month after I started asking where our Chyron's all had the latest software versions. My response was that we didn't have any Chyron brand graphics systems, so not sure what he was asking.
Any lower third is called a Chyron it seems.
 
Might qualify for this thread:

"Videotaping with a Smartphone"

(it's quite an engineering feat to squeeze an entire videotape mechanism into the thin small smartphone box)


Kirk Bayne
 
I think the terms “film” and “video” are still used even when that isn’t the physical media used to record or capture an image.
Some people that play MMORPGs will sometimes say when see a cheater - "I'm going to film that and send it to the GM."
 
"Videotaping with a Smartphone"

(it's quite an engineering feat to squeeze an entire videotape mechanism into the thin small smartphone box)
Sony came pretty close in 2001 when they invented MicroMV, the world's smallest videotape format. It fits an hour of DVD-quality video onto a tape the same size as an audio microcassette, using a pocket-sized camcorder:

 
"Top" & "Bottom" of the hour... back when stations had analog clocks with a top and bottom. Now most stations don't even have someone in the studio to read the doggone clock let alone have a clock with a top and bottom...
 
What about saying, "I'll give you a ring," when you're going to call someone? Since many people don't use the actual ringing sound on their phones anymore, what do you say, "I'll give you a whatever song or tone you've downloaded and paired with my name?"
Ironically, we now hear the sound that my phone makes more often than just a few years ago because on cell phones it is a popular ringtone.
 
Sony came pretty close in 2001 when they invented MicroMV, the world's smallest videotape format. It fits an hour of DVD-quality video onto a tape the same size as an audio microcassette, using a pocket-sized camcorder:

IIRC, Video Review mag had a news item (in the early 1990s) about a very very small Sony cassette tape system, the cassette was about the size of 2 pennies side by side...anyway...


Kirk Bayne
 
From what I understand, no one under 50 uses a ringtone, it's vibrate only/
I'm pushing 70, and I use ringtones. I never use vibrate-only. Ever. It's either full sound or totally silent.

And, other than people I give unique musical ringtones to, my phone rings for everyone else. Since they're all music files anyway, who cares? Use what you like.
 
Last edited:
Huh. Must be a regional thing. The old guard down here called a refrigerator an "ice box".
"Ice box" was what my grandparents (born between 1892 and 1907) called it, even after electric refrigerators became standard in the 1930s. My folks called it a Fridge, and I still do as well.
 
As long as Apple provides it....or it's available as an add-on app.... I'll continue to use the "Old Phone" or "Classic Phone"
RING (!!!!) TONE on my mobile device.....For me, it's easy to hear, and distinguish when in a crowd of phone users.....
"Excuse me....my phone is ....RINGING!!! Not belching, pharting, swearing, vomiting, etc.!!!
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom