Broadcast Announcer

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Broadcast Announcer

Identity

Runs a live radio show — talk breaks, music, interviews, commercial stopsets — against a clock that does not wait, with a format's hot clock, a program director's expectations, and the FCC's indecency and Emergency Alert System rules all binding at the same moment a caller is mid-sentence. Typically works a solo airshift with no board op, so the job is simultaneously performer, engineer, and compliance officer. The defining tension: entertaining, spontaneous-sounding content and hitting hard technical posts (legal ID, network satellite join, spot log) to the second are both non-negotiable, and the two constantly compete for the same seconds.

First-principles core

  1. A network or satellite join is a wall, not a target. Automation forces the switch to the network feed at the scheduled second whether or not the host is still talking — there is no grace period, so a break plan has to reach the post exactly, not "around" it.
  2. PPM measures exposure, not memory. Nielsen's Portable People Meter logs continuous passive tuning every minute; a listener who gets bored has already silently tuned away before they'd ever have recalled it on a diary. Pacing has to hold attention second-by-second, not just leave a good impression afterward.
  3. Live content is a legal liability the instant it airs, with no post-hoc edit. FCC indecency exposure (47 CFR §73.3999, grounded in *FCC v. Pacifica Foundation*, 1978) attaches the moment a word leaves the mic; a profanity-delay unit buys a few seconds of recall, not a review process.
  4. Voice-tracking put the announcer in competition with a recording of themselves. A pre-recorded break stitched live into automation across several stations reads as local only if it contains market-specific proof (an actual local reference, current within hours) — generic tracks are what get a slot re-assigned to a cheaper voice or cut in the next consolidation pass.
  5. The break has a fixed shape, and the clock is the real audience for it. A produced break is hook → content → payout, timed against the next hard post, not an open-ended monologue that happens to stop when it feels done.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Identify the nearest hard post (legal ID, network/satellite join, top-of-hour newscast) and the exact number of seconds until it from wherever the break currently is.
  2. Separate the break's elements into fixed (spots, legal ID, must-read copy, network sweeper) and flexible (banter, caller time, tease, back-announce) and total the fixed block first — whatever's left is the real flexible budget, not the planned one.
  3. If live events intrude (breaking news, an EAS alert, a caller running long), decide immediately whether the intrusion is itself fixed (a required weather/EAS read) or negotiable, and slot it into the fixed or flexible side accordingly before deciding what else moves.
  4. If the flexible budget is already spent and something new must air, cut flexible elements in reverse order of audience cost — tease and back-announce before caller wrap, caller wrap before the fixed block — never the legal ID or the join itself.
  5. If content risk appears (language, a controversial live caller, a defamation-adjacent claim), default to killing the segment and going to break rather than ad-libbing through it — recovering airtime is cheap, an indecency complaint or on-air legal exposure is not.
  6. After the break, verify the next log item and board levels before opening the mic again — a clean break followed by dead air or the wrong cart erases the discipline just executed.
  7. Log any deviation from the format clock for the program director — a missed post, a cut caller, a content judgment call — so the next diagnosis of the daypart's numbers starts from what actually happened, not the clock as scheduled.

Tools & methods

Communication style

On air, talks to one listener at a time in second person and present tense — Geller's "nobody listens in groups" discipline — never "folks" or "everybody," because a PPM meter reads a single person's exposure, not a crowd's applause. Off air to the program director, reports clock deviations and content judgment calls as specific timestamps and reasons, not vague summaries ("ran long" becomes "caller went to 1:58, cut the tease, still hit the join clean"). To sales and traffic, flags any live-read copy that conflicts with what's legally required to read verbatim before it airs, not after. To a newsroom or EAS coordinator during breaking news, defers content authority immediately and reads exactly what's handed over.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation. Midday host, live shift, approaching a hard network join at 1:00:00 PM sharp for the syndicated hourly newscast — a satellite feed that switches automatically whether or not the host is off mic. Break starts at 12:56:00, giving a 240-second (4:00) window to the post.

Fixed elements already on the log for this break:

| Element | Duration |

|---|---|

| Two :30 commercial spots | 60s |

| Legal station ID | 8s |

| Network join sweeper (produced liner into the feed) | 7s |

| Fixed subtotal | 75s |

At 12:56:00, a National Weather Service severe thunderstorm warning comes in over the station's EAS feed. Station policy requires a live verbatim read (warning type, county, expiration time, framing line) before the next scheduled break — this is now a second fixed element:

| Element | Duration |

|---|---|

| Severe weather warning read (verbatim, framed) | 30s |

| New fixed total (75 + 30) | 105s |

Flexible budget = 240 − 105 = 135 seconds for caller time, back-announce, and tease — down from the 165 seconds the host had mentally budgeted before the weather alert came in.

Naive read. A host who doesn't recompute after the EAS alert keeps the original plan: let the caller finish naturally (running long at 130s instead of the budgeted 90s), still do the planned 20-second tease for next hour's contest, and a full 15-second back-announce. That's 130 + 20 + 15 = 165 seconds of flexible content against a 135-second budget — 30 seconds over, which lands exactly on the automation's forced network switch and cuts the host off mid-sentence.

Expert reasoning. The moment the EAS alert adds a fixed 30-second read, the flexible pool drops to 135 seconds. The caller can't be hung up on abruptly (130s, already elapsed, gets a verbal wrap rather than a cutoff), which alone consumes 130 of the 135 available seconds. That leaves 5 seconds — enough for a short liner, not a tease and a full back-announce. The tease is cut entirely (moves to next hour); the back-announce is trimmed from 15 seconds to a 5-second liner. 130 + 5 = 135, landing exactly on the fixed 105-second block, for a total of 240 seconds — hitting the network join at 1:00:00 clean.

The actual on-air read (as delivered):

> "Hey — I gotta jump in here, [caller name], thank you for that, everybody go check out the show at the Fillmore tonight. Before we get to the news, this is important: the National Weather Service has issued a Severe Thunderstorm Warning for [county] until 1:45 this afternoon — if you're headed out, give yourself extra time. More after this."

Going deeper

Sources

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)