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John T wrote:
When I was a student at the Ron Bailie School of Broadcast in the old 420 Taylor KBHK building we trained in some of the original 1930s NBC control rooms. And did working with record cutting lathes and the NBC chimes help you in your broadcasting career? Fun though it may have been if I'd paid a bundle to go to a private broadcasting school I'd have wanted to be trained on equipment that I would typically deal with. The only station I found that had old ET equipment from the 30s was KCHJ in Delano, largely because after Charles H. Johnes died in 1968 the family wanted to run the place like a museum. KCHJ wasn't a typical radio station. I was rather upset when I was at CSM that we had to deal with antiquated black and white equipment and just one camera with a zoom lens at KCSM-TV. While we learned about equipment that was fairly state of the art on the radio side (KCSM-FM), we learned zilch about programming because Dan Odum was so fond of his block programming. Such training prepared us for...uh...KFAX, KEST, and other also-rans, but didn't prepare us for KFRC or any other station that was going anywhere in the market. Of course, the concept of broadcasting schools is moot today, given that there is simply no need for them anymore, but the equivalent might be going to a computer school and learning how to program on punch cards. |
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