Legislation history (esp. Telecom Act of 1996) questions?

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it was sad because we had more creative control over the music used in commercials than we played on the air.

I remember our local Alt-Rock station using sampled riffs from Sleater-Kinney (a band you would never hear there otherwise) as sound beds for station I.D.'s and bumpers circa '99/'00.

Going back to automation for a second, another role it played was in drastic station format changes. A device would be brought in to handle all the programming for a few weeks after a station would fire their on-air talent upon a "sudden" format change.

"I must believe that my charm was not in my ass." (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 13 January 2017 00:47 (seven years ago) link

The biggest effect of the Telecom bill was the massive consolidation of radio stations. You'd have two or three stations under one roof, either independently owned or part of some regional corporation. But after '96, big national companies would come in and buy half of the market. In our city, Clear Channel took over six or eight different stations, pulled them up from their little studios facing Main Street and clustered them all together in a "metroplex" way out on the west side.

You're starting to see it more and more with television stations. The old rule that one company can't own more than one station in a given market has had loopholes stabbed through it in the past 20 years. We've got one group, an NBC affiliate and a FOX affiliate, who share a newsroom together. The NBC station is owned and operated by Nexstar. It also operates the FOX station, which is technically owned by Mission, a company run out of a broom closet somewhere in Ohio.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 02:36 (seven years ago) link

In our city, Clear Channel took over six or eight different stations, pulled them up from their little studios facing Main Street and clustered them all together in a "metroplex" way out on the west side.

That's exactly what happened in Houston, except to a higher degree: They bought at least one station of every genre*, consolidated them into a few floors in a high rise in the Galleria, and have rolled on ever since, occasionally selling off a station to a lesser conglomerate.

*I say "at least" because at one point they had three Rock stations (Classic, Alt-, and Album/Active) going simultaneously--Only one of which is still running that format.

"I must believe that my charm was not in my ass." (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 13 January 2017 02:52 (seven years ago) link

this isn't for a paper (i wish), i just read a bunch of eric harvey's articles and papers (s/o if you read this, eric) and some interviews with the black madonna about old dance stations in chicago (that still have a real impact in terms of widespread knowledge of old-school house among a lot of ppl) and realized how much the radio experience was different from the one i came into growing up. it's really eye-opening to hear about the changes as they happened in real time.

as for the stuff that came in before the deregulation, were these a bunch of different devices/automated tech? or were they all ClearChannel operated

austinb, Friday, 13 January 2017 03:18 (seven years ago) link

thx for all the stories regardless yall

austinb, Friday, 13 January 2017 03:18 (seven years ago) link

I worked for an anomaly, two stations under one roof owned by a family from Texas*. After Clear Channel and Citadel came to town, all of the DJs and talk show hosts that we had previously competed against came through the door. Some of them only stayed for a few months, some are still there.

*A family who also started Texas Instruments, but good folksy people nonetheless.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 03:20 (seven years ago) link

were these a bunch of different devices/automated tech?

After I turned 16 in 1989, I got my start in radio at a little country station in a rural area of the state. My boss got up at five in the morning, came down to the station and turned on the signal around six. From seven to eleven, he'd play music, host the swap shop hour, and give the weather.

At eleven, he'd turn on the automated DJs. We'd get these reels shipped to us every week where out-of-state announcers backsold a coordinated programming list of our country format. Sometimes, a tone would get skipped and you'd have the announcers backselling the wrong song. It was kinda like the radio scenes from Night of the Comet:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0X1q8gtS-jg

I'd come in at five, re-run the morning swap shop show that my boss recorded on a reel. Play a few more hours of automation and then become a Star of the Ozarks with my one hour of live radio from between eight and nine. Mrs. McCrosky would call me every few nights and request "Tie Your Dream to Mine" by Marty Robbins. At nine, I'd sign off, turn off the transmitters, and go home.

Our commercials played off of one of these things, a "carousel cart" filled with recordable eight-tracks, each with only 40 or 70 seconds worth of tape inside 'em.

http://i.imgur.com/jC03kHl.jpg

Between the swap shop and the live hour, I'd print off the next day's sheet of commercials, highlight every other four-digit number, and then program them into a numeric keypad on the carousel.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 03:32 (seven years ago) link

Also gasoline cost a dollar and you could get a Coke out of the machine for just 50¢. The quarters had eagles on the back of them, not like the mesas and valleys you see on them now-a-days.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 03:41 (seven years ago) link

that carousel cart is so fancy! we just had the single cart players, we had 3 of them, but it was rare that all 3 worked at any given time. occasionally we'd have a song that had to be played on a cart -- the occasional radio edit we did ourselves that the labels didn't send us -- I think one was a NIN song -- and if it was scheduled right before a commercial break then it was a nailbiter to see if the song cart would recue and stop before the commercial in the other working cart machine ended.

sarahell, Friday, 13 January 2017 09:39 (seven years ago) link

We had a station ID cart that was old enough the woman's voice had bled through and created a tape delay effect. It was awesome. We didn't replace any of that crap until 1999.

My first shift was 2-4am. The DJ on 1-2 am immediately quit about 2 weeks into the semester, thank god.

The beaver is not the bad guy (El Tomboto), Friday, 13 January 2017 11:40 (seven years ago) link

In college, we had all the local bands on cart. We didn't play cassette tapes. And the band giving us a CD copy of their music would've been just too darn expensive.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 14:21 (seven years ago) link

Going back to the country station, we used a single cart player for IDs, news we taped from the Arkansas Radio Network and weather.

We should've used a single cart for the commercials, since after six it was all spots for Golf Digest anyway.

pplains, Friday, 13 January 2017 14:22 (seven years ago) link

Anyway I keep reading this as being about the Elvis Telecom act of 1996.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 January 2017 15:04 (seven years ago) link

haha me too!

sleeve, Friday, 13 January 2017 15:05 (seven years ago) link

"Drone rock mandated when driving through the desert at 2 am."

Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 January 2017 15:14 (seven years ago) link

https://www.wired.com/2004/10/xmradio/

Abrams has another advantage: a surfeit of available DJ talent. When he arrived at XM three years before launch, many of the country's best DJs were disillusioned, disenfranchised, or out of the industry. Conglomerates, newly empowered by the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to own multiple radio stations, were consolidating and shedding overhead – particularly the salaries of creative, engaged DJs

curmudgeon, Friday, 13 January 2017 16:09 (seven years ago) link

this is p amazing if you want a picture of what Bay Area radio pre-Telecom Act sounded like

https://archive.org/details/schweizerairchecks?&sort=-downloads&page=2

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 18 January 2017 20:22 (seven years ago) link

Anyway I keep reading this as being about the Elvis Telecom act of 1996.

I was going through a lot back then.

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 1 February 2017 04:32 (seven years ago) link

I did a few shows at BRU (AM though, haha). Starting in about.. 1994 I guess? Just dumb sound collage weirdness, I thought I was Negativland or something :/

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 1 February 2017 08:13 (seven years ago) link


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