But younger listeners don't even associate it with the sound of a teletype. They've never heard a real teletype nor know what one is. They only associate it with the "sound" of 1010 WINS. Just like Radio Reloj's ticking clock and Morse code beeps, it is the signature sound of the station, and helps it stand out on the dial, regardless if listeners know its historical legacy. In fact, I'm in my 30s, so I grew up past the age of the teletype. So when I was young, I thought the tacka-tacka-tacka noise on WINS was the sound of a stock market ticker, not of a teletype!badjef said:The teletype that WINS uses is constant and the younger generation is not going to relate to it as they get older and listen less to the music stations. It just is not going to transcend to the next genetation of news radio listeners. To keep it, is suicide.
Maybe, but refer back to a previous post on this thread. The New Yorkers get so complacent that a WKTU or Z100 makes it to #1 in a book and a half.satech said:But younger listeners don't even associate it with the sound of a teletype. They've never heard a real teletype nor know what one is. They only associate it with the "sound" of 1010 WINS. Just like Radio Reloj's ticking clock and Morse code beeps, it is the signature sound of the station, and helps it stand out on the dial, regardless if listeners know its historical legacy. In fact, I'm in my 30s, so I grew up past the age of the teletype. So when I was young, I thought the tacka-tacka-tacka noise on WINS was the sound of a stock market ticker, not of a teletype!badjef said:The teletype that WINS uses is constant and the younger generation is not going to relate to it as they get older and listen less to the music stations. It just is not going to transcend to the next genetation of news radio listeners. To keep it, is suicide.
I'm sure WINS management has discussed many times before the possibility of getting rid of the teletype sound, and for whatever reason, has decided to keep it. And given WINS's ratings success, I trust their judgement. They'll probably kill off the IBOC long before they kill off the teletype.
Silkie said:
satech said:But younger listeners don't even associate it with the sound of a teletype. They've never heard a real teletype nor know what one is. They only associate it with the "sound" of 1010 WINS.
satech said:I'm sure WINS management has discussed many times before the possibility of getting rid of the teletype sound, and for whatever reason, has decided to keep it. And given WINS's ratings success, I trust their judgement. They'll probably kill off the IBOC long before they kill off the teletype.
Entries.cd637299 said:...ai4i's entry...
ai4i said:BTW...for a classical music station, this would be my news sounder of choice!
cd637299 said:Silkie said:
That's a great song!! Also I'm listening to ai4i's entry....
cd
Silkie said:cd637299 said:Silkie said:
That's a great song!! Also I'm listening to ai4i's entry....
cd
The YouTube video is hysterical.
ai4i said:Who can tell us what those NBC chimes originally rep'ed?
Was it Uncle Walter?WPPCProductions said:Not to go off topic.Probably before my time.Who's TV Newscast use the teletype background sound back in the day.
So, if you have to tell people what you do, maybe you are not communitcating what you are doing - in a communication business.Gregg said:I think the tele-type sound effects in the background work great for telling everyone "This is an All-News Station!"
Howard is putting out an entertainment program. It is hardly a credible new organization.Do younger generations not know about tele-type machines? Maybe. But they still know somehow the sound means "News Room." Has anyone mentioned that on Sirius/XM, Howard Stern's "Howard 100 News" also uses the tele-type sound effect? Certainly many under-40 listeners know that sound means they're hearing Howard 100 News.