LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,732
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
It's a life experience not unlike serving in the military in wartime, only in the sense that both life experiences bring you into contact with personalities and experiences that if you're prudent in learning from them can be helpful in the future to understanding the perimeters of your immediate experiences.
The years I spent in radio were like this -- I learned more from the people I worked with, about how the industry really worked, and about the world outside the studio, than I ever could have learned in any classroom. I worked alongside grizzled old veteran broadcasters who were on the air in the 1930s, and I worked with wacky hippie-type characters who would tell stories about sleeping on the floor backstage at rock concerts at Boston Garden, and I worked with cocaine-sniffing gun-packing psychopaths who claimed to be on the run from the mob. Well, maybe only one guy like the latter, but you get the idea.
A textbook can tell you how to approach a microphone, or the way to write a script, or the basics of broadcast libel law. But it can't come close to giving you the kind of education I got from these people. I'd interview kids looking for jobs who'd just graduated with honors from Emerson, and had a nice shiny demo reel and dressed sharp for the interview, and I'd tell them, "you did well in school and that's nice. But now let me tell you about how this really works..."