by radio guy » Sun May 26, 2013 2:36 pm
... in addition to so many other duties, jack wiebe and his team maintained the production studios when i worked as a producer at rogers' ash street broadcast centre and the studios were top notch. the engineers were solely responsible for acquisitions of new gear and luckily jack knew exactly what to purchase and he outfitted the studios with great equipment. it was an immense pleasure working in that studio ...
... the one piece of gear that jack brought in that i appreciated most was a high-quality cassette deck, a denon i think it was. that might not sound like a big deal, but actually it was. part of the process of selling radio ads involves giving the clients a copy of their spots on cassette after they're produced and as a producer you want the spots to sound as good as possible for the customers. accordingly, i was thrilled when jack came into the studio with a brand new cassette deck one day ...
... the other day i was thinking about radio station operations, trying to determine in my mind who are the most important personnel at a radio station, and ultimately i came to the conclusion that the engineers are most important. yes the talent is crucial too, but it's the engineers who are responsible for getting the signal out to the public and without them there would be nothing. you could look at it this way: the engineers are the ones who craft the instrument that the talent makes the music with ...