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− | URY is not a 24-hour radio station (usually), so it has a '''sustainer''' whose job is to play something during downtime to make sure URY never broadcasts dead air. | + | URY is not usually a 24-hour radio station, so it has a '''sustainer''' whose job is to play something during downtime to make sure URY never broadcasts dead air. |
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− | This page is a tribute to the various sustainer systems URY has had over the years. | + | This page is a tribute to the various sustainer systems/services that URY has had over the years. |
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| == Sustainer Technology Through The Ages == | | == Sustainer Technology Through The Ages == |
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| === 19??-1998 Student Radio Network === | | === 19??-1998 Student Radio Network === |
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− | Reference is made between Summer 1997 and Summer 1998 of URY relying on the Student Radio Network for out-of-hours broadcasting. The wiki team currently don't know much about the SRN, but it was likely similar to the Student Broadcasting Network URY later used. | + | Reference is made between Summer 1997 and Summer 1998 of URY relying on the Student Radio Network for out-of-hours broadcasting. The wiki team currently don't know much about the SRN, but it was likely similar to the Student Broadcast Network URY later used. |
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− | === 1998-19?? Student Broadcast Network === | + | === 1998-2004 Student Broadcast Network === |
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| [http://web.archive.org/web/19991116112903/http://ury.york.ac.uk/schedule/t-sbn.htm Back in the 90s] the sustainer service came from the ''Student Broadcast Network'' who broadcast news, music and programming on a national basis for student radio. | | [http://web.archive.org/web/19991116112903/http://ury.york.ac.uk/schedule/t-sbn.htm Back in the 90s] the sustainer service came from the ''Student Broadcast Network'' who broadcast news, music and programming on a national basis for student radio. |
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| </blockquote> | | </blockquote> |
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− | The SBN folded in 2004. As a piece of URY History, there's a minidisk containing 2 hours of pre-recorded SBN programming floating around the office that dates circa 2000/2001.
| + | In addition to using SBN to cover blank space in the schedule overnight, URY also used to take SBN "compulsory programming" in exchange for circa £6k per year of additional funding. Compulsory programming included SBN Breakfast from 08:00 to 09:00 every weekday; and typically a 1 hour specialist music show sometime between 21:00 and 00:00 every weekday. Compulsory shows can often be seen on URY's printed schedules in a different colour, to indicate that they are SBN rather than URY shows. URY was also required to take news and adverts from SBN at the top of every hour. |
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− | === 2004?-???? OWEN === | + | SBN's business model was advertising-based. All compulsory shows were sponsored by paying advertisers, who were name-checked repeatedly throughout. 30 seconds of adverts would typically follow the news at the top of each hour, which again brought in advertising revenue. SBN would then pass a share of their advertising income on to subscriber stations. |
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| + | Compulsory show slots were often used to deliver face-to-face training to aspiring presenters in Studio 1. |
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| + | SBN went into administration in summer 2004. SBN owed URY £6k for the 2003/04 academic year, which was never paid, leaving a black hole in URY's budget and requiring significant changes to the YUSU societies budget to absorb. This was one of the events that drove the creation of York University Media (YUM), to give the media societies greater collective bargaining power with YUSU. |
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| + | As a piece of URY History, there's a mini-disk containing 2 hours of pre-recorded SBN programming floating around the office that dates from circa 2000/2001. |
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| + | === 2004-???? Overnight Owen === |
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| ''More information needed.'' | | ''More information needed.'' |
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− | This system, named after Owen Murphy (station manager), is the source of the ''Overnight Owen'' slots that appear in the schedule at around 2005.
| + | "Overnight Owen", named after Owen Murphy (the then Station Manager), was introduced during the summer of 2004 to replace SBN (see above). Between SBN going into administration and Overnight Owen being deployed, URY was largely sustained using a Norah Jones album on repeat as an emergency measure to avoid dead air. |
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| === 2012-present INSIDIOUS TONES === | | === 2012-present INSIDIOUS TONES === |