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Many airchecks are made by the announcers themselves on a recorder that begins recording when the mic is turned on and then goes into pause when the mic goes off. In the '60s and '70s reels of tape were used for these "skimmer" airchecks. Later it was cassettes. Today many stations use minidiscs, recordable CDs or computers for aircheck creation. DJs use airchecks to critique themselves, sometimes with the Program Director listening along with them to provide suggestions for improvements. Announcers keep some of their airchecks as "audio snapshots" of their career. Airchecks are also recorded at radio stations to send to clients to show how their live commercials, remote breaks or contests sounded.
Airchecks are also used in the Television industry, mostly for billing purposes. An aircheck is the only accurate record of what aired on a TV station. Stations generally maintain airchecks for 1 year. Generally, airchecks are recorded by the Master Control department of most TV stations, and are recorded on VHS. The standard is 3 8-hour tapes per day, one per each shift. On this tape contains the Video of the On-Air receiver at the station recording what actually broadcast, usually there is a time-of-day graphic superimposed over the video to keep track of what aired and when it aired. References
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