Subj : Turntables and LPs To : Brian Rogers From : Ogg Date : Sat Sep 04 2021 09:19 pm Hello Brian Rogers! ** On Tuesday 31.08.21 - 18:33, Brian Rogers wrote to Ogg: Og>> It went alright. The university radio station had three Og>> studios all "connected" and visible to each other by Og>> large glass windows. I would be in one studio and the Og>> host would be in another. The host of the show would Og>> either give me a hand signal or they give me the key Og>> words to listen to before starting a song or breaking to Og>> commercial. BR> I could never do a show like that. While I realize it may BR> have been easier for you, I'd still have an issue doing BR> that. It wasn't a problem at all. We could always get the attention of the other person by sending a message over the headphones. It was like working as a team. I learned how different hosts preferred to work. Techs could select a particuilar show to work on, or a host could try to request a specific person to work with. Og>> To qualify being part of the radio club, we were put Og>> through a test that consisted of a mock solo radio show. Og>> [...] BR> I never minded the announcing. I'm sure it was a pretty BR> simple test to take. It was fairly simple for the most part. But the tester injected random "emergencies" or something specific that needed to be done. One random request required me to queue up a specific commercial/announcement which tested my ability to find it in the pile of tapes, and even queue it up in an adjoining studio and control it back in my main studio. And.. I had to play it within a specific time integrating it into the flow and context of my own show. I loved the ability to control gear in another studio, but it required specific jumpering to set that up. Og>> I volunteered to power up the transmitters on Sunday Og>> mornings and queue the national anthem. That was a cool Og>> job with lots of switches to flip and dials to turn. BR> I bet! When I was in high school still, I was doing a BR> sunday morning show and then had to run the weekly god BR> squad. It was a 500Watt daytime AM that played hot A/C... BR> borderline CHR. I'd have to fire up the transmitters and BR> wait a bit for them to be at spec before turning the BR> switch to the sticks out in back on. Yes.. I think my campus station was on AM at the time too. There was a warm up period to reach spec before flipping some main switches. BR> The station had a cat, it was it's mascot of sorts which BR> was cool. Feeding the cat was part of opening duties. It BR> was a pretty neutral cat, not mean but not overly BR> friendly. No litter box duties? --- OpenXP 5.0.50 * Origin: Ogg's Dovenet Point (723:320/1.9) þ Synchronet þ CAPCITY2 * capcity2.synchro.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/Rlogin/HTTP .