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Not sure about that. Radio is more forgiving of dead air than TV, and with radio you don't have to worry about what you look like or where you are looking, and can be waving your arms all over the place to get attention, be given lots of last minute copy, be franticlly leafing through scripts/copy without the audience knowing etc.
I think it will be interesting to see how this pans out - and what Victoria's role is - and whether there is a supporting team of news, sport and business presenters? And where the show comes from? And how it sits in the channel schedule etc.
What a load of absolute rubbish!
Radio is not more forgiving of dead air than TV. I should know, I present radio. Dead air aka silence on radio, is regarded as a cardinal sin. You just don't do it. At least with television, you have pictures that go along with the silence.
During a show, a presenter is mostly focused on what they're saying or doing on the air. A producer may talk to them in their headphones on occasion to let them know about breaking news, or they might send them a message on their computer. Most scripts and copy now are on computer rather than paper.
Overall, a radio studio atmosphere is a lot calmer than the equivalent atmosphere in a TV studio, and Victoria has been getting used to having more voices in her ear than she had in radio.
If you compare like with like, Noggin isn't talking "absolute rubbish".
When in-vision, TV is hardly forgiving with dead air. On radio, especially if you're twiddling the knobs, you can anticipate dead air and fill it easily. As Noggin says, it's hard to tell if a presenter filling or not.
Anticipate dead air?????????????????
Tell me, when were you last in a radio studio when dead air happened unexpectedly?
Me? It was yesterday, when a piece of music didn't play immediately and I had to fill a few seconds. Hey, things like this happen occasionally
Also, you have to remember that on her 5 Live radio show, she wasn't at the controls, a separate producer was controlling the board. Also, she would have had the producer in her headphones from time to time. So she wil be familiar with having a voice in her ear.
But honestly, anticipate dead air? Dead air happens when something goes wrong that you can't anticipate, like a radio link going down without warning, or a computer deciding to either not play a piece of audio or take some time to start playing it.
It's the same skill though, in fact its probably easier on TV as there's more support and there's pictures to talk to.
Not sure about that. Radio is more forgiving of dead air than TV, and with radio you don't have to worry about what you look like or where you are looking, and can be waving your arms all over the place to get attention, be given lots of last minute copy, be franticlly leafing through scripts/copy without the audience knowing etc.
I think it will be interesting to see how this pans out - and what Victoria's role is - and whether there is a supporting team of news, sport and business presenters? And where the show comes from? And how it sits in the channel schedule etc.
What a load of absolute rubbish!
Radio is not more forgiving of dead air than TV. I should know, I present radio. Dead air aka silence on radio, is regarded as a cardinal sin. You just don't do it. At least with television, you have pictures that go along with the silence.
During a show, a presenter is mostly focused on what they're saying or doing on the air. A producer may talk to them in their headphones on occasion to let them know about breaking news, or they might send them a message on their computer. Most scripts and copy now are on computer rather than paper.
Overall, a radio studio atmosphere is a lot calmer than the equivalent atmosphere in a TV studio, and Victoria has been getting used to having more voices in her ear than she had in radio.
If you compare like with like, Noggin isn't talking "absolute rubbish".
When in-vision, TV is hardly forgiving with dead air. On radio, especially if you're twiddling the knobs, you can anticipate dead air and fill it easily. As Noggin says, it's hard to tell if a presenter filling or not.
Anticipate dead air?????????????????
Tell me, when were you last in a radio studio when dead air happened unexpectedly?
Me? It was yesterday, when a piece of music didn't play immediately and I had to fill a few seconds. Hey, things like this happen occasionally
Also, you have to remember that on her 5 Live radio show, she wasn't at the controls, a separate producer was controlling the board. Also, she would have had the producer in her headphones from time to time. So she wil be familiar with having a voice in her ear.
But honestly, anticipate dead air? Dead air happens when something goes wrong that you can't anticipate, like a radio link going down without warning, or a computer deciding to either not play a piece of audio or take some time to start playing it.