Monday, November 20th 2017 (Helping Others)
Lindsay begins her final placement this morning so she'll be awake in a minute or two. I had better get on with it.
How quickly the weekends flash past us. I remember when days were so long and slow that I could scarcely believe it, scarcely bear it. When I first got sober on the old WQD website I had a period of weeks before I relapsed and ended up drinking again for a few months. I found AA and things were a little easier – I had things to do on the weekends – but when I first sobered up using the WQD site there were weekends when I didn't see a soul and I remember them being long and punishing. Now they are so short I feel as though to blink I might miss one.
I was supposed to mention this over the weekend but it slipped my mind completely (and rightly so) but while I was driving the hire car to pick up Barry the Bullet for work on Friday morning after the Opeth gig at the Barrowlands the night before something terrible happened over the radio. Many terrible things happen over the radio all the time and studying it only helps me to see how silly an industry it actually is but on this occasion there was a phone in and it was a guy talking about how his daughter was getting really excited about the ''big fat guy in the red suit'' coming and asked if they could play a Christmas song. The presenter refused and then the caller's daughter came onto the phone to say that if he was a bad boy and didn't play the song then Santa wouldn't be coming to town for him. He declined once again and ended the call but then the co-presenter came in and Mariah Carey started singing. The first Christmas song I heard this year was on the 17th November.
That was not the biggest issue here though. I'll admit that it is a big issue though – let's wait until next weekend when the lights go up in all of the town centre's, eh? The biggest issue I had with this whole thing was how fake and staged it was. I get it – not everyone listens to radio the way a radio student will, and not everyone has my gift/curse of being able to smell bullshit from advanced distances, but this really was cringy. Staging something like a child on the radio asking for Christmas music is a little pathetic to say the least and this station will forever be known in my eyes for this which will have a drastic effect on my likelihood of ever listening to them again but I guess that from a radio station's perspective in trying to make money and get as many listeners as possible (and with most people so distracted these days that they can't smell bullshit even when it comes along and whacks them in the face like it has done here) then it is good business.
Later in the day Barry and I saw the first house to be covered in decorations.
I am usually on air with my radio partner Stephanie on both Monday and Tuesday afternoons and we normally divide the duties in half with her taking the presenting role one day while I am just a backup and then reversing these roles the next day. This week will be a little different though as I have completed the four assessed shows that require airtime to do. Well – the Assessed Show 2 Pre-recorded Show doesn't really need you to be on air but the others do: Assessed Show 1 was demonstrating that we can use the equipment; Assessed Show 3 was showing that we could present a show while interacting with social media; and Assessed Show 4 was proving that we had recorded our three interviews (studio, telephone, and on location) and that we could integrate them into a live show; and I have managed to do them all – I just need last week's Assessed Show 4 to be graded which will happen this morning in class.
My radio presenting partner has, unfortunately, not done any of her assessed shows and so we are going to be dedicating this week to her. Rather than having us swap duties she will just take up the presenting role on both days this week (and next if necessary) and I will simply act as a backup presenter while we try to get her through at least Assessed Shows 1 and 3 this week. The interviews will have to wait until she's actually recorded them but the other two shows can be done easily enough if she's put a little work into them over the weekend which, going by our communications on Facebook over the last couple of days, she seems to have done.
While I was doing my Assessed Show 4 on Tuesday last week a few of the other students came into the studio. Usually I lock the door but o this occasion we left it unlocked for some reason and so other students were walking in and out. Not ideal, but I turned them into part of the show and asked them about the NHS and their experiences since this show revolved around the interviews I carried out with mum, Lindsay, and Gillon last week. This gave me both content I could use for the show and extra interviews for my podcast series which will soon be the only thing this semester I have to work on.
I was surprised by some of the comments I received about my presenting style. They were very complimentary. One guy was saying how it never ceases to surprise him how some of the louder people in the class clam up and don't have much to say when the microphone goes live whereas quiet people in class come out of their shells and seem really upbeat and confident in front of the live microphone. I come out of my shell when in front of the radio desk, just like I used to when I had an electric guitar in my hands. General feedback from both lecturers and students this year has been really positive and this is one of the reasons I feel better able to work effectively while in the studio – even when there are other students walking in and out while I am recording an assessed show. I'd love to tell this to Hamish from AA, and a few others, and show to them that confidence grows faster and more genuinely when you are challenging yourself outside of the AA rooms.
This week will be all about trying to get my radio partner across the line where a couple of assessed shows are concerned.
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Stevie
Helping others.
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