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Chananya wrote:
Maybe someone can help me out with something: I'm interested in becoming a radio DJ or going into radio broadcasting. I have a few disabilities that require accommodations so I have asked some people in the industry how this would affect my goal. I haven't received much response from them. Can anyone on here help with this? Please contact me if you have any info... Assuming that you are in the US.... If you had said this twenty-five years ago, I would have told you that radio is a great place to work. I have worked with board ops, DJs, and announcers with all sorts of disabilities. Once had a board op who was blind; we took the glass covers off the console VU meters so he could feel the pins and made sure all of the carts were in the same order every day since he couldn't read the labels on them. I've had announcers and program directors in wheelchairs, which actually got us to clear some of the crap out of the air studio and make a clear path through it. Radio is... err... was... one of those fields where it doesn't matter what you look like, who you are, or what disabilities you might have as long as the final result sounds good on the air. The thing is... the consolidation and deregulation of the past twenty years has really made a mess of things, and that the current point in time I would not recommend radio as a career for _anyone_, disabled or not. For one thing, those stations that used to have half a dozen announcers and board ops, a transmitter engineer, a traffic director, and a couple sales people on staff are now being run by a single guy playing back crap that comes off the satellite link... with no local station staff, the number of jobs available is a fraction of what it once was, and the jobs are less interesting. PS. I am in touch with the broadcasting departments at the local colleges and with the disabilities office but I need more input. Does anyone even still HAVE broadcasting departments? Now, I should point out that if you aren't in the US, but you are in a country with a vibrant and active radio community (and there are a lot of them out there) that perhaps you should disregard what I said. Go to a radio station and ask for a tour and a job. That's how everyone starts out.... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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