Boy, these must all be old stories, because they deal with people working at radio stations at night.
PTBoardOp94 said:Cry on the air or on the telephone?
May have to try that one ... since Monday, 3 "hotline" calls![]()
NH Radiochild said:I once had a situation where I was working at a talk station and we were running a live program from a remote location. Problem is, (although there probably wouldn't have been much I could do about it anyway), the remote equipment was fed directly to the transmitter, circumventing the control board at the studio. There was only one way to cut it off and that was to call the automated FM "Moseley" and kill the feed. A phone call would take way too long to cut it off on a whim, plus it butted up right against a live read weather forecast.
It was a two-hour program with a 4 or 5 minute satellite newsfeed at the top of the hour. Close to the end of the news, the owner (who was running the remote equipment) calls up and proceeds to tell me that he didn't want theme music. Now, I can't for the life of me imagine why in the middle of a show, you suddenly decide to ditch some music that has been a standard for the program throughout but nonetheless, that was what I understood. Maybe he meant the weather music I was using, but still, not something you should bring up in the middle of a shift.
Maybe I misheard, but I followed through, giving as much of a voice lead-in as possible so they'd know to take the reins. And then... DEAD AIR... then this: the owner popping the mic on and asking OVER THE AIR "Uhhhh, Mark. Where's the music?". Needless to say, I ensured there was music from then on, but I wonder what would have happened if say it was a bum cart rather than misinterpreted instruction? Probably the same thing.
Professional radio rule would have dictated to get the HOST to just start the program. I mean, you shouldn't be off by more than 10 seconds anyway. It's not like it was a great music bed, it was just an outdated ABC talk radio music bed.
TheBootlegger said:It's not like the GM is interrupting you in the middle of open heart surgery. Pros can take a call from a GM, PD, pissed-off spouse or whatever and NEVER let it affect their work on-air. Not saying the GM should call over every little thing but, let's be frank, some jocks need a knock on the head every once in a while. Now get back to your show and put away that sports page!
justalurker said:From the modern era ...
Not to say that a "did you know the station is off the air" call with 20 "what are you doing about it" questions was helpful ... especially if answering those questions delayed getting back on the air. But at least it was a valid call.
shortbaldguy2007 said:justalurker said:From the modern era ...
Not to say that a "did you know the station is off the air" call with 20 "what are you doing about it" questions was helpful ... especially if answering those questions delayed getting back on the air. But at least it was a valid call.
Just a quick off topic but kind of related question...how many of you have been working when the station goes off the air and you get the calls from listeners that go something like this: "are you off the air? Yes, we are. Shouldn't you announce that?"
If I had a dime for every one of those!
gr8oldies said:Two words.....Vern Kaspar. In a previous life in his employ, the man never slept. 3 seconds of silence on the reel to reel automation system (we are talking the 80s),phone call "you're stupid. You're incompetent!". he once called to complain that we weren't doing wall to wall coverage on tornadoes in Evansville, some 200 miles away.
RDO said:Vern's editorials. Isn't that why he applied for all those translators? So he could have his editorials heard by more people.![]()