With the exception of a handful of places, there are more than one TV or radio station available to pick up the slack if needed.
I thought it was interesting to see the way the radio stations in New Orleans handled Katrina a few years ago.
With the exception of a handful of places, there are more than one TV or radio station available to pick up the slack if needed.
In many cases, they did it to themselves and had only themselves to blame.
Contract engineers have been a reality back to the 70's at many stations, some big and some in smaller markets.On the Radio World article: Most small market stations can't afford a full time engineer. The contract engineer is the new reality ...
But they will not pay for the lost audience, some of whom will never return after a long failure.That's what business interruption insurance is for.
I'm definitely not blaming the author, TheBigA - Sorry if I gave that impression. My comments were intended to be more general. Radio World and other publications have run several stories and editorials over the years asking where the younger/newer breed of engineers are and my thoughts are often the same. Why did many (not all or even most) in the industry refuse to teach, cultivate and nurture younger talent when they had the opportunity to do so, yet now seem to struggle to understand why there aren't a batch of younger guys in place and ready to take over.Keep in mind that the author of this article isn't an owner or a representative of the industry. He's another engineer. One who survived what you're talking about. So I wouldn't blame him for circumstances that exist. He's simply a weatherman who is predicting some snow.
The big issue is that many newer engineers don't understand higher power RF, propagation, antenna tuning, directional systems and a whole lot of related items.
I remember years ago, our CE at a station I was briefly with had his tech center in the back of the second-floor station studio and office location.I believe a lot of good potential engineers became disgruntled back when many stations consolidated under 1 owner, and in many cases several stations' studios that were once in separate areas of town began to consolidate under 1 roof. Instead of each AM/FM having its own engineer on staff who did everything from repairs to studio maintenance to remotes to fixing the coffee maker and even maybe the VCR at the station manager's house,
They are... even scholarships and ongoing training and certifications.Isn't that where SBE comes in? They used to be pretty active.
Radio World and other publications have run several stories and editorials over the years asking where the younger/newer breed of engineers are and my thoughts are often the same..
And, in my market, neither do the broadcasters. We had a major ice storm several years back, causing utility power to be severely interrupted for over a week. And when I did a band scan during what would ordinarily have been morning drive the first morning. Most of the AM/FM broadcasters were off. Maybe they had gensets which ran out of fuel. Maybe they had icing problems and the transmitter shut down. But the bottom line was, they were off. My employer at the time was on the air, but we only briefly lost utility power.What about the people who depend on the TV and radio stations for their news and info?
The cell phones won't work after the power has been down a few hours.
I would think that the main reason for that is post-1996 Telecom Act there are less airstaff slots than there were in previous times.I see it slightly different. What I see at radio stations today is airstaffs filled with boomers. They wonder where are the young DJs. The answer is there are no open slots because the boomers have held down all the best jobs for 40 years or more. So there's a thread about who will replace Rush Limbaugh. The answer is no one.
I would think that the main reason for that is post-1996 Telecom Act there are less airstaff slots than there were in previous times.
Staff reduction is mostly due to the technology that allows one person to do shows on multiple stations with minimal distribution costs and easy to use software to make it possible.I would think that the main reason for that is post-1996 Telecom Act there are less airstaff slots than there were in previous times.
I know. But there was mass consolidation after Telecom, and that reduced a lot of airtime slots (as well as production and engineering slots).
That was going on prior to consolidation even with small owners that had stations in multiple markets. We were doing that with the Salsoul Network in Puerto Rico in the mid-80s on a network that was linked with microwave and used Harris System 9000 automation.I know. But there was mass consolidation after Telecom, and that reduced a lot of airtime slots (as well as production and engineering slots).