Asa group we decided to all give each other a particular production technique and then link to each others
Running Order.
A running order is to prepare and organize the presenter of what items are going to run in, placed in a logical order. This includes, songs, idents, links, and content for the presenter to talk/discuss about. Timing is often used on running orders to keep the radio show on time without running over. When creating a running order, either on a document on a computer such as Celtx/word document or even printed, a lot of space is left for the presenter to make any notes on them. Here is a running order from ‘The Chris Moyles show’.
Friday 14th August 2009 The Chris Moyles Show with Vernon
06:30 - News and Sport
06:35 – Vernon and the team are broadcasting live from Edinburgh, the home of Scott Mills the Musical. Vernon recaps on his cameo role last night and is still excited about it all
07:00 - News and Sport
07:15 – Dave gives his report of the Musical shenanigans recorded live last night at Pleasance in Edinburgh
07:30 - News and Sport
07:40 – Vernon and Dave find out who was the better driver from their trip to Rockingham on Wednesday. It was a close call, but overall Vernon was the winner and, if there was no one else available, could be Schumacher's replacement.
08:00 - News and Sport
08:05 – Vernon rubs it in that he was victorious at the race track
08:20 – We play clips of Vernon’s big moment treading the boards in Scott Mills The Musical. We hear his rendition of MC Hammer’s ‘Can’t Touch This’ and his venture into a bit of freestyle break dancing. It is quite impressive.
08.30 – News and Sport
08.40 – The registration doors of Car Park Catchphrase are officially open! We hear one of the best moments from yesteryear and are all looking forward to more golden moments from next week onwards.
09:00 - The Golden Hour part one - 1998
Air – ‘Kelly Watch The Stars’
Bare naked Ladies – ‘One Week’
5 – ‘Everybody Get Up’
The Verve – ‘Sonnet’
Fat Les – ‘Vindaloo’
All Saints - ‘Under The Bridge’
The Beautiful South – ‘Perfect 10’
As you can see there are times written on every item that’s coming up. I’ve noticed that some things are bold and some things aren’t. These are to make more important things stand out to the presenter, in this case, Chris Moyles. I had found this on the BBC website, so it does look more presentable than what it would look like on the desk in the studio. Where there are songs, when it comes to doing our show, we will be more specific and include song times so we could roughly predict how long our show will be and how much time would have left. The running order is also used for something to fall back on, to prevent dead air on the show. Depending on what style of show you are producing will depend on how detailed the running order is. For example, if it’s a chatty show, for the content, there will be little information where as if it’s a documentary or factual show, the information will be a lot more in depth.
A running order is to prepare and organize the presenter of what items are going to run in, placed in a logical order. This includes, songs, idents, links, and content for the presenter to talk/discuss about. Timing is often used on running orders to keep the radio show on time without running over. When creating a running order, either on a document on a computer such as Celtx/word document or even printed, a lot of space is left for the presenter to make any notes on them. Here is a running order from ‘The Chris Moyles show’.
Friday 14th August 2009 The Chris Moyles Show with Vernon
06:30 - News and Sport
06:35 – Vernon and the team are broadcasting live from Edinburgh, the home of Scott Mills the Musical. Vernon recaps on his cameo role last night and is still excited about it all
07:00 - News and Sport
07:15 – Dave gives his report of the Musical shenanigans recorded live last night at Pleasance in Edinburgh
07:30 - News and Sport
07:40 – Vernon and Dave find out who was the better driver from their trip to Rockingham on Wednesday. It was a close call, but overall Vernon was the winner and, if there was no one else available, could be Schumacher's replacement.
08:00 - News and Sport
08:05 – Vernon rubs it in that he was victorious at the race track
08:20 – We play clips of Vernon’s big moment treading the boards in Scott Mills The Musical. We hear his rendition of MC Hammer’s ‘Can’t Touch This’ and his venture into a bit of freestyle break dancing. It is quite impressive.
08.30 – News and Sport
08.40 – The registration doors of Car Park Catchphrase are officially open! We hear one of the best moments from yesteryear and are all looking forward to more golden moments from next week onwards.
09:00 - The Golden Hour part one - 1998
Air – ‘Kelly Watch The Stars’
Bare naked Ladies – ‘One Week’
5 – ‘Everybody Get Up’
The Verve – ‘Sonnet’
Fat Les – ‘Vindaloo’
All Saints - ‘Under The Bridge’
The Beautiful South – ‘Perfect 10’
As you can see there are times written on every item that’s coming up. I’ve noticed that some things are bold and some things aren’t. These are to make more important things stand out to the presenter, in this case, Chris Moyles. I had found this on the BBC website, so it does look more presentable than what it would look like on the desk in the studio. Where there are songs, when it comes to doing our show, we will be more specific and include song times so we could roughly predict how long our show will be and how much time would have left. The running order is also used for something to fall back on, to prevent dead air on the show. Depending on what style of show you are producing will depend on how detailed the running order is. For example, if it’s a chatty show, for the content, there will be little information where as if it’s a documentary or factual show, the information will be a lot more in depth.
How to do a playlist - Amyroseford
No comments:
Post a Comment