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Clean Feed is quite common as the term in the UK. IFB is used in the US, and Mix-Minus in other areas.
And the loop played by the News Control Room at Television Centre has all three of those terms listed on it's soundtrack! "This is the Clean Feed from BBC Television News in London. This is the IFB from BBC Television News in London. This is the mix-minus circuit from BBC Television News in London".
Clean Feed gets you by in most circumstances. However I've found when training up sound operators, "Mix-Minus" is actually quite a good way of describing what sound mix you need to send to a contributor - it's literally everything you're transmitting except the contributor themselves. If you don't give a contributor a proper clean feed you can end up with some spectacularly bad results on-air. Very often a dodgy earpiece feed will be delayed (quite considerably in some circumstances) and if the contributor can hear themselves back in their ear you'll get slurring, slowing, and, at worst, unintelligible nonsense.
I think I'm right in saying that "Mix-minus" is one of those terms that the BBC calls something different to the rest of the broadcasting industry! They call it a "Clean feed".
Clean Feed is quite common as the term in the UK. IFB is used in the US, and Mix-Minus in other areas.
And the loop played by the News Control Room at Television Centre has all three of those terms listed on it's soundtrack! "This is the Clean Feed from BBC Television News in London. This is the IFB from BBC Television News in London. This is the mix-minus circuit from BBC Television News in London".
Clean Feed gets you by in most circumstances. However I've found when training up sound operators, "Mix-Minus" is actually quite a good way of describing what sound mix you need to send to a contributor - it's literally everything you're transmitting except the contributor themselves. If you don't give a contributor a proper clean feed you can end up with some spectacularly bad results on-air. Very often a dodgy earpiece feed will be delayed (quite considerably in some circumstances) and if the contributor can hear themselves back in their ear you'll get slurring, slowing, and, at worst, unintelligible nonsense.