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“Old-time” Radio Takes Backseat to Paying its own expenses
June 5, 2011
by Bob Burnham

WHO AM I TO THE “OTR” WORLD?
I’m the guy for the last several years who has sat behind tables of thousands of audio CDs and a few other products. I have been a “regular” for many years at both the Cincinnati and Friends of Old Time Radio conventions in Newark.

Fewer and fewer people, however, really know who I am who still attend these events today. I’m not much of a “recreation” fan.  While I’ve met a lot of really amazing radio “celebrities,” since I’m in the business anyway, I don’t regard any of them as anything more than “regular people” with unusual occupations – and that’s what the best of them are like. 

I’m the one who developed the audio product from the ground-up.  I’m not an mp3 peddler, content to be salesman.  I’m an audio engineer, too.

Clean up, creation and production of those products requires a lot of technology.  Fortunately, that’s my business, too, but it does not come without some cost.

HOW IT STARTED & PROGRESSED
I began the business long ago with little more than a Smith Corona typewriter and a bunch of tape decks.  Eventually, better quality tape decks and typewriters were acquired.

Then we computerized much of the operation in the 1980s.

Dot-matrix printers and eventually Laser Writers were used for such things as cassette labels and catalog layouts.  Hand-typing labels of any kind became a thing of the past and the old-time radio world readily supported this advancement.

OUT WITH THE OLD IN WITH THE NEW
However, the end of the 1990s phased out, the audio cassette product, replaced by audio CDs.
  This was a change we had to “force” upon many loyal supporters who already had very large accumulations of analog tapes.   We all managed to survive.

On the plus side, that product has also evolved as the technology to clean-up and “master” audio evolved and became more affordable.

LOOKING BACK
Thirty-five years is a long time to be doing anything, but during that time, a few things never changed:  That we would support any entity or person who supported us, that we would have uncompromising attention to detail with regard to sound quality, and that we’d deliver the best service we were able to at reasonable prices.

There are a lot of “methods” to my madness – and madness IT CERTAINLY IS having operated the “old-time” division in the “red” for the last couple years.

Yet we have many friends, and the “enemies” if there ever really were any – have faded away. By nature, I’m a survivor and we never REALLY stopped.  We took a couple years “off” to work on the newer product plus nurture a “professional services” business.

HOW IT’S DONE
To make the catalog marketing work today (now essentially as a one-man-operation), we use several mostly custom-built networked computers. Along with those workstations are two HP printers, four network-attached storage boxes, plus specialized “nostalgia” audio equipment (to retrieve the content of original masters). Such old-school equipment includes Otari and Tascam reel to reel and cassette decks.  We have no “consumer-grade” equipment in service at this time.

The computer software has also evolved and I have to know enough about everything to be fairly dangerous, but fairly efficient at the same time.  Once in a great while, there are equipment failures.  We don’t generally use repair centers, as that is also one of my specialties. 

A variety of methods have been used to help pay the bills.  Of recent years, the most “profitable” (if you could call it that) of which has been the two conventions we attend every year.  

One of those conventions will cease to exist after this year.
What this will mean to my operation is unknown at this time.
I intend to continue to issue periodic supplements hopefully on a quarterly basis.  These are primarily recent additions to the digital library.  Occasionally, there are still new shows found and brought into circulation.

A LOOK TOWARD TOMORROW
With a look toward the future, all shows are mastered at a higher quality grade than that of a standard CD.  If there is some variation of “SUPER MP3” that catches on, our archive will already be ready for it. 

My audio work will eventually all be downloadable at minimal cost. Anyone who has already posted any of my work without my permission will eventually fade away as well.

I have a lot more to accomplish as one of “sources” to the digital world of original material.  The fact is it’s available right now in a couple different popular digital formats, but wait!  There’s more:  Those who have supported my work over the past couple decades will have free access to the downloadable archive library… as mentioned, I am a “survivor,”. but it’s going to be A WHILE!

----Bob Burnham 
----06-05-2011
 
Reunions and Recollections
A Means to an End
by Bob Burnham


Fall of 2010 will go down in my personal history book as the time I hung with lots and lots of people who’ve known me or at least OF me for at least 30 years.

It seems 30+ years ago was a milestone in many of our lives. We got started with common interests related to radio, and those interests never went away.


I have already written about the Friends of Old-time Radio conventions.

One of the first stations that broadcast “old-time” programming that I had an association with (I was overnight Air Talent), was WSHJ, Southfield, Michigan’s  “public” station with a format that competed directly with commercial stations in the Detroit area.

A recent WSHJ Reunion brought to mind a few things:  We were all older, much wiser, but we still hadn’t forgotten those years nor lost our passion for what brought us together in the first place. 

The same is absolutely true of the “old-time” radio conventions, of which I’ve been to many.  I know how to “do radio” the way I do wearing either “hat” only because I’ve constantly compared notes with those involved.

You can’t survive doing what we do without having that network of people.  Along the way, I’ve been lucky enough to be associated with some of the absolute best in the business – both technically as well as programming.  It helped, because I wanted to be the best I could be.

None of us “hard core” people do what we do to make a lot of money.  In fact, it’s quite the opposite in that all of us have actually made personal sacrifices of time and money in pursuit of those interests.   Some of us were also actually clever enough to have found related niches with which we can earn a living sharing our knowledge, skills or acquired resources.

WHO THE HECK AM I?
I am essentially a product developer and technical service provider to the broadcast industry as well as people interested in its history and its programming.

I am also an audio perfectionist!  I can make a radio station with a minimal budget sound better to the general public, but I can also take recordings made with primitive technology before I was born – sound like they were broadcast yesterday.   

Yet I also know programming and what it takes to put it together!  I have worked deep in the “trenches” of various radio stations in many capacities.  The past is in the past, but having that background has given me much insight as to where its going.

But remember, I didn’t develop this “stuff” in my mind overnight.

This “radio thing” and I go back 30 years.  I've "dated" RADIO longer than anyone else. Just ask any of the people who were there with me near the beginning.  

It’s true, I can (and have) physically built broadcast facilities from the ground up – but I can also assemble a complete “day of broadcast” on a modern broadcast automation system.   

Next, I’ll turn around and assemble a collection of “old-time” programs then layout a brochure using Adobe In-Design that markets it  (I’m not really “good” at In-Design, but know enough to be fairly dangerous marketing my own stuff).  

All of this to me, is merely a means to an end.  I originally built radio stations because I just wanted to BE ON THE RADIO.  

Today and back then, basically, I just wanted “do” radio (not merely "date" it!), and perhaps celebrate the way it USED TO BE before my existence was even thought of.

Next month marks the 35th Annual Friends of Old-time Radio Convention.  Through some quirky twist of fate, unless I get run over by a bus, I’ll be there.  

Just look for the kid from Detroit with a newly-assembled-digitally-restored package of “old-time” shows – that originated from Detroit.


 -Bob Burnham
   September 26, 2010
 

Surviving the Tax Man

George Harrison wrote and sang about the Tax Man, I live it.

The wild and wacky life I lead comes at a price.

Every year at this time I go through a ritual of doing tax prep for my Accountant.  

But mine isn’t like "normal" people (whatever that is) because radio and its related things I do to survive  make for mountains of paperwork.

Once I get past this week though, I promise I’ll have some fresh tales to tell.

Meantime, if you wanna tap into some OLD radio in the Detroit area or listen on their web stream, WHFR 89.3 from Henry Ford Community College is carrying my stuff Monday nights from 11:00 to midnight.  Mystery and horror are featured…everything from Suspense to Inner Sanctum to I Love a Mystery.  Check it out.  On the web, it’s
www.whfr.com.  WHFR also does a great job giving an outlet to local Detroit musicians.
Bob