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Encyclopedia > Aircheck

In the radio industry, an aircheck is generally a demonstration recording, often intended to show off the talent of an announcer or radio programmer to a prospective future employer. A scoped (telescoped) aircheck usually contains only segments where the announcer is actually talking. In an unscoped aircheck, all programming is left intact and unedited, including music, commercials, newscasts, jingles and other on-air events. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Continuity announcer. ...


Methods

Airchecks can be recorded directly off the air (from a tuner or modulation monitor), from the pre-air feed that goes into the transmitter (which usually has been modified by the station's processing), or directly from the on-air console before the station's processing has been applied. Antenna tower of Crystal Palace transmitter, London A transmitter (sometimes abbreviated XMTR) is an electronic device which with the aid of an antenna propagates an electromagnetic signal such as radio, television, or other telecommunications. ...


Some radio stations used "logger reels" for airchecks. On these large reels of tape would be recorded the air signal at super-slow speeds. These reels were kept by the station for regulatory purposes (e.g., to provide an audio record that commercials ran as logged or to confirm aired content after allegations of inappropriate content). After a time, these logger reels would be reused or discarded.


Many airchecks are made by the announcers themselves on a recorder that begins recording when the microphone is turned on and then goes into pause when the microphone goes off. In the '60s and '70s reels of tape were used for these "skimmer" airchecks. Later it was cassettes. Today many stations use minidiscs, recordable CDs or computer digital recordings for aircheck creation. See also IBMs VM operating system family, where minidisk refers to a logical unit of storage. ... A CD-R (Compact Disc-Recordable) is a thin (1. ...


Uses

DJs use airchecks to critique themselves, sometimes with the Program Director listening along with them to provide suggestions for improvements. Announcers keep some of their airchecks as "audio snapshots" of their career.


Airchecks are also recorded at radio stations to send to clients to show how their live commercials, remote breaks or contests sounded.


Some airchecks of older radio programs are highly prized by collectors, due to their nostalgia value. For example, "baby boomers" often enjoy listening to airchecks recorded from "Top 40" radio stations in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly if they are airchecks of the same stations that the person listened to when they were a teenager or young adult. Many such airchecks were made in the 1960s by DJs who then sent them to troops in Vietnam, and a surprising number have survived. Another class of aircheck has to do with transitions between formats, where recordings are made of the final hours of an old format or early beginnings of a new format. One may feel nostalgic for the familiar routine of school, conveniently forgetting the painful experiences such as bullying. ... A baby boom is defined as a period of increased birth rates relative to surrounding generations. ... Top 40 is a radio format based on frequent repetition of songs from a constantly-updated list of the forty best-selling singles. ...


For television

Airchecks are also used in the Television industry, mostly for billing purposes. An aircheck is the only accurate record of what aired on a TV station. Stations generally maintain airchecks for 1 year.


Generally, airchecks are recorded by the Master Control department of most TV stations, and are recorded on VHS. The standard is 3 8-hour tapes per day, one per each shift. On this tape contains the Video of the On-Air receiver at the station recording what actually broadcast, usually there is a time-of-day graphic superimposed over the video to keep track of what aired and when it aired. Control room for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, taken November 7, 2005 during an interview with Gen. ...


References

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Aircheck Tape (1562 words)
The term "aircheck" is borrowed from broadcasting, where disc jockeys and newspeople can hear their on-air performance with a sense of realism not possible by simply recording from the studio microphone.
For your part, as the aircheck monitor, you'll do the station a favor by limiting reception to consistant, repeatable changes, if any are made at all during the course of the comparison.
The highest quality airchecks are made from the so-called "diode" output of a vacuum-tube, non-synthesized, receiver with an enhanced bandwidth that is not defined through mechanical filters.
RadioWeb - The Radio Demo/Aircheck (2220 words)
The live aircheck shows how you actually sound on the air, but isn't necessarily in the format of the station to which you are applying.
The major drawback to a prepared, or produced, aircheck is that if you've never had on-air experience and if you do get the job, you now must be able to perform up to the standard set on your demo tape.
If it's a live aircheck of a newscast you've done at your current station, you can include a very short section of the lead-in to your newscast that might include the news entry jingle or sounder before you begin to speak.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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