The second article states: "That notification must come at the beginning of the program and be clear and understandable to the audience."
It's a corporate mandate from iHeart on ALL stations including music stations. Its in response to the FCC fine imposed on Salem.
The older I get the more I hate the English language (or should I say 'American'?).
You can be a Luddite or recognize that languages are dynamic; word meanings change, new words are created and old ones are abandoned.
An example of a recent change in usage is the abandonment of the word "of" with couple. It used to be "a couple of idiots..." not it's "a couple idiots...". For me, it is hard to get used to, but for most people under 30 it is normal.
Many internet abbreviated terms and acronyms are becoming accepted words and are in the dictionary. I'm sure many of the old folks in the early 1900's had a hard time assimilating all the new terms associated with radio, wireless, automobiles and the like as technology exploded, too.
"Pre-recorded" is not a word.
1. prerecord - record before presentation, as of a broadcast. recording, transcription - the act of making a record (especially an audio record); "she watched the recording from a sound-proof booth". record, tape - register electronically; "They recorded her singing".
prerecord in British English. (ˌpriːrɪˈkɔːd) verb (transitive) 1. to record (a radio or TV programme) before broadcasting. 2. to record sound or images (on a CD, cassette, video, etc) beforehand.
It's in Merriam-Webster's dictionary which shows its known usage dates back to 1882.
And yet it has a definition:
So it IS a word, and it HAS a usage and meaning. Maybe not to you. Not just for people under 30, but anyone who speaks the language.
The British definition is the one I like: "To record beforehand." I think that explains it properly. And sure you can argue that you can't record afterwards, but this is distinguished from real time recording, or to record something NOW.
But we're not talking about new words or even different meanings for existing words. We are dealing with the bastardization of an existing word. Even given the usual liberty that American English gives us, 'pre-recorded' is a word that means nothing.
You can record something but you cannot record something before it has been recorded - which is what 'pre-recorded' is trying to say. It is either recorded or it isn't.
As far as language by Americans under 30, I try to ignore them. Most haven't been taught proper English (or anything close to it), have a very limited vocabulary, can't spell worth a damn but mostly just don't care. I return the favor. If that makes me a Luddite then so be it.
But you can abbreviate "previously recorded" into prerecorded. Every word in English with the pre- as that is a standard prefix for "before, previous to, earlier than" as in prehistoric or preview.
Then what would be wrong with using just 'recorded'?
It's a corporate mandate from iHeart on ALL stations including music stations. Its in response to the FCC fine imposed on Salem.
https://radioink.com/2020/01/30/why-salem-was-hit-with-50000-fcc-fine/
Some other companies are doing it as well as an attempt to prevent getting fined.
https://www.broadcastlawblog.com/20...-seems-to-be-live-fcc-sends-a-50000-reminder/