[BC] Destroying history
RRSounds@aol.com
RRSounds
Thu Feb 23 10:06:22 CST 2006
Barry, Donna, Rob, Harold, Mr. Peabody and all other lovers of history...
When I arrived at Z100, roughly five years after its inception, I became
aware of the serious regard the employees had for its place in NYC radio history.
The management maintained a series of scrapbooks, the big, newspaper-sized
ones, filled with every article about Z100 they found published either locally or
nationally.
Although I'm sure Z100 is/was not unique in this exercize, it was the first
time I had seen such diligence. What a treasure trove!
One hopes they continue the practice today, and that those books are kept in
a safe place.
Kind Regards,
David P. Reaves, III
TransLanTech Sound, LLC
Creators of the Award-Winning "Ariane Stereo Audio Leveler"
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 22:55:05 +0000, "Rob Atkinson" <
ranchorobbo at hotmail.com> wrote:
<<
I've dealt with both types. there is the type who thinks absolutely
nothing should ever be thrown out because someday, in some inconceivable
circumstance, it will be needed. Then there are the ones who like a desk
with a single sheet of paper on it and nothing else, and anything that
hasn't been used for two weeks--out it goes. I believe these people aren't
trying to hide anything or dislike the past; they just don't think about
history at all. they are grounded in the present, view anything unused as
"clutter" and regard a cleared out space as an efficient office. I'm
somewhere in between. so both types bug me.
Decent storage and preservation of gear, paper records, magnetic recording
tape etc. takes some time and effort. At small broadcast enterprises,
everyone is so consumed with the day to day operation, historical stuff just
gets pushed to one side. When it starts to get in the way and encroach on
needed space for work, a manager makes a snap decision to do something here
and now, to free up space because there isn't any time for organized
storage, so the snap decision is to throw stuff out and move on. It's the
same in other businesses as well.
rob atkinson
st. charles IL
From: "Harold Hallikainen" <harold at hallikainen.com>, Wed, 22 Feb 2006
10:19:44 -0800 (PST)
Gary, K?CX wrote...
I'm not certain what emotion prompts the destruction of historical
material,
but I have seen new owners do everything possible to eradicate *any*
material relating to previous ownership, call letters, formats, etc. I
suspect some are neat freaks and throw anything for which they don't see
an
immediate use. Maybe some don't feel they have storage space.
And...some
probably never want to be in the position of being compared to a much
more
successful predecessor. I guess I could understand it if the previous
licensee and the station had a really sordid past.
Add my name to the list of those who fail to understand those who throw
away history. But then again, I'm such a packrat I never throw away
anything.
Which is why I call my site
(http://sujan.hallikainen.org/BroadcastHistory/) "Saving History From The
Dumpster." I'm trying to come up with a logo for it. Maybe I'll pile a
bunch of manuals in front of a dumpster and take a photo.
Harold
>>
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