I hope the FCC goes knocking on WBZs door and says "Give us back 40,000 of your 50,000 watts between those hours because it's clear that you're behaving like a 10,000-watter anyway."
At least, until the first EAS or Amber Alert at 3 AM is missed, or some big story gets by them (but not the competition).
aaronread said:And hell, I don't know if WBZ has actually done this, but the entire EAS setup COULD be rigged to be operated completely remotely if necessary. With call forwarding and dial-up remote controls, it's not that hard to do.
the scribe said:KimTunicliffe is still with the station but her hours have been reduced.
aaronread said:Just because the newsroom is "closed" doesn't necessarily mean nobody is in the building. Are there still board-ops on the overnights who can wake up the PD/News Director if a newsworthy event happens, and then start doing basic news while the news team is called in?
And hell, I don't know if WBZ has actually done this, but the entire EAS setup COULD be rigged to be operated completely remotely if necessary. With call forwarding and dial-up remote controls, it's not that hard to do.
jk111 said:As I put it in another thread over the weekend local live news has disappeared after the newsblock ends at 8pm with recorded local updates following CBS toh news,and 60 second CBS updates at bottom of hour. 8.5 hours of no live and local.
pocket-radio said:jk111 said:As I put it in another thread over the weekend local live news has disappeared after the newsblock ends at 8pm with recorded local updates following CBS toh news,and 60 second CBS updates at bottom of hour. 8.5 hours of no live and local.
Dude in the biz it's called: " less is more" money in our pockets. Or optimizing share holders value.
optimizing operations for greater returns. Efficient use of corporate resources. Wait I'll reread my emails and come back with more, corporate speak that always means here's how we screw you..
Eli Polonsky said:The EAS can be set up to interrupt programming in the station airchain and automatically forward (rebroadcast) any emergencies, amber alerts, etc... just a moment after it receives them.
WMBR at MIT has it set up to do this (and also rebroadcast the required monthly tests) to keep the station EAS compliant in case the on-air DJ/engineer may fail to do it.
JIBGUY said:This reminds me of another news station here in the Northeast (not WBZ) which boasted on air, of their "24-hour News Desk". As I kept hearing same-repeated newscasts on the overnights, I chuckled to myself knowing that yes, the DESK was there 24 hours every day.....
EAS MUST be set up to automatically interrupt programming. I have it on good authority (an FCC inspector) that any other method violates FCC rules...specifically, the one which states that presidential messages transmitted during an EAS activation must be aired live and immediately.
JoshuaC said:EAS MUST be set up to automatically interrupt programming. I have it on good authority (an FCC inspector) that any other method violates FCC rules...specifically, the one which states that presidential messages transmitted during an EAS activation must be aired live and immediately.
Almost... The part about the Presidential Level EAS is indeed true. EAS Weekly and Monthly tests are given a window within which you are able to rebroadcast (60 minutes and 15 minutes I believe, respectively).
However, there's currently no obligation for participating stations to rebroadcast Required Weekly Tests (RWT) within a certain time limit of receiving them from the primary station(s). The participating stations must note receipt of a RWT in their operations log (confirming that their EAS receiving equipment is working), but then they are supposed to conduct their own RWT at any time of their choosing at some point within every week (even if they didn't receive one from a primary station, though they should have).