They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music,
to a programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a
new look at peoples unexplained experiences.
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music, to a programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a new look
at peoples unexplained experiences.
Sysadmin <jon@home.net> wrote:
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music, to a
programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a new look
at peoples unexplained experiences.
I had been listening to BBC R4 until less than a minute before I read
your e-mail. I had been trying to follow a documentary on why
Birmingham City Council went bankrupt but had given up because it was >impossible to concentrate on the dialogue against a background of
continuous pointless sound effects.
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music, to a >programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a new look
at peoples unexplained experiences.
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music, to a programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a new look
at peoples unexplained experiences.
On Sun, 15 Oct 2023 15:15:21 -0000 (UTC), Sysadmin <jon@home.net>
wrote:
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music, to a >>programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny' a new look >>at peoples unexplained experiences.
Also, they now obsess about promoting BBC Sounds, which is also
misleading. 'On BBC Sounds and on Radio 4 at 3 pm' is ambiguous as it
could mean it is on BBC Sounds at 3 pm or it is on BBC Sounds at any
time (starting when?).
I had a letter printed in our paper suggesting a 'broadcast only'
licence and a more expensive 'broadcast and internet' licence just
like the black and white and colour licences. There must be a
significant proportion of the population with no interest in following
the BBC on the internet who would rather have conventional services
such as local radio.
Yes the late night shows that are now natural are pretty banal. The weekend >ones are not bad as Jo Good has a long pedigree of local radio, but the week >long one seems to be struggling to find a format that people want to
interact with.
Brian
Sysadmin <jon@home.net> wrote:
They just cant resist adding silly explosive sounds and eery music,
to a programme classed as a documentary. I am speaking of 'Uncanny'
a new look at peoples unexplained experiences.
I had been listening to BBC R4 until less than a minute before I read
your e-mail. I had been trying to follow a documentary on why
Birmingham City Council went bankrupt but had given up because it was impossible to concentrate on the dialogue against a background of
continuous pointless sound effects.
On Mon, 16 Oct 2023 14:18:11 +0100, "Brian Gaff"
<brian1gaff@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes the late night shows that are now natural are pretty banal. The
weekend
ones are not bad as Jo Good has a long pedigree of local radio, but the >>week
long one seems to be struggling to find a format that people want to >>interact with.
Brian
As a total aside, do you ever listen to Classic FM late at night? Do
you expect an enhancement in the audio when they move to DAB+ in
January?
No and no.
They nearly always overcook the limiter which can be heard as a crackle at
the start of piano notes.
Interestingly, my friend who worked for the RSNO said it was good for
ironing and driving,
On Fri, 20 Oct 2023 09:47:29 +0100, "Brian Gaff"
<brian1gaff@gmail.com> wrote:
No and no.Interestingly, my friend who worked for the RSNO said it was good for
They nearly always overcook the limiter which can be heard as a crackle at >>the start of piano notes.
ironing and driving, where the audio compression was helpful.
Brian Gaff wrote:
They nearly always overcook the limiter which can be heard as a crackle at >> the start of piano notes.
Interestingly, my friend who worked for the RSNO said it was good for
ironing and driving, where the audio compression was helpful.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 297 |
Nodes: | 16 (0 / 16) |
Uptime: | 120:30:26 |
Calls: | 6,662 |
Files: | 12,210 |
Messages: | 5,334,424 |