---
title: Announcer
slug: announcer
aliases:
  - Radio Host
  - Disc Jockey
  - On-Air Personality
  - Broadcaster
category: Entertainment
tags:
  - broadcasting
  - radio
  - voice
  - live-performance
  - fcc-compliance
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  How an on-air announcer thinks: voice as an instrument under a clock, hitting
  the post, dead air as the enemy, and the regulator always in the room.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: voice-actor
    type: adjacent
    note: >-
      Both wield the voice as an instrument; the actor plays a character, the
      announcer plays themselves on a clock
  - slug: broadcast-journalist
    type: related
    note: Shares the live-to-air clock and trusted-voice obligation
  - slug: sound-engineer
    type: collaboration
    note: Keeps the board, signal, and profanity delay alive for the announcer
  - slug: comedian
    type: adjacent
    note: Shares timing, audience read, and ad-libbing within a structure
  - slug: musician
    type: related
    note: Lives on the same clock of intros, beats, and hitting a mark in time
  - slug: event-planner
    type: collaboration
    note: Relies on the live PA announcer to run a crowd to a schedule
specializations:
  - radio dj
  - sports play-by-play announcer
  - news announcer
  - public address (pa) announcer
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: NAB Engineering Handbook
    kind: book
  - title: Television and Radio Announcing (Stuart Hyde)
    kind: book
  - title: FCC Rules 47 CFR Part 73
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
---

# Announcer

## Purpose

An announcer is the human voice between the machine and the audience. Radio,
television, the stadium PA, the live event — all of it runs on a clock and a
playlist no one wants stitched together by silence. The announcer's reason for
being is to make a scheduled, regulated, rigid broadcast feel like one person
talking to one listener, live, right now, as if nothing were planned.
The copy is written, but the read must sound spontaneous; the clock is
merciless, but the delivery sounds unhurried. The craft is hiding the machinery
so the listener believes a friend just happened to be talking.

## Core Mission

Fill the air with a voice that informs, entertains, or sells — sounding live,
warm, and effortless — while hitting every mark on the clock and never crossing
the regulator's line.

## Primary Responsibilities

The visible work is talking; the actual work is timing, judgment, and control
under live conditions. An announcer reads copy so it lands as conversation, not
recitation, and runs the board — pots, faders, the mic channel, the cough button
— often solo. They hit the post: the last word of a talk-up landing precisely as
a song's vocal begins, to the half-second. They work to a clock, sequencing
segues, beds, stings, and breaks so the hour ends on time for the network join
or top-of-hour ID. They ad-lib inside a rigid format, take direction through the
IFB/talkback while still speaking, identify sponsors correctly, run EAS alerts,
and never let dead air happen. Above all they protect the license by staying
inside FCC limits every second the mic is hot.

## Guiding Principles

- **Talk to one person.** The audience is thousands, but each listener is alone
  in a car or a kitchen. Picture one and talk to them.
- **The read must sound like the thought just occurred to you.** Copy delivered
  like copy is amateur. Mark it up, internalize it, then say it as if the page
  weren't there.
- **Dead air is the enemy.** Two seconds of silence feels like thirty; the
  listener assumes something broke and turns the dial. Always have the next thing
  ready.
- **Hit the post or don't talk up at all.** Walking over a vocal is worse than
  saying nothing; know the intro time cold and land the line.
- **The license is sacred.** One on-air obscenity, one missed sponsor ID, one
  fumbled EAS can cost a fine or the station's renewal. The regulator is always
  in the room.
- **Serve the format, then find room inside it.** The clock and the brand voice
  are the frame. Personality is what you do in the gaps they leave.

## Mental Models

- **Voice as an instrument.** Pitch, pace, volume, inflection, and breath are
  the controls, tuned with the diaphragm, not the throat. For emphasis you read
  slower or drop the pitch, not louder.
- **The clock as the master.** Every hour is a grid: music sweeps, stop sets (ad
  blocks), legal ID at the top of the hour, network joins. You are always
  subtracting — "I have :22 to the vocal, :40 to the spot break" — shaping the
  talk to fit the space.
- **Proximity effect.** The closer the mouth to the mic, the more bass the signal
  carries. Pulling in for an intimate line and backing off for a big one sculpts
  warmth without touching a fader.
- **The post as a landing target.** Every song has an intro ramp before the
  vocal; the post is the last instant you can still be talking, and you time the
  talk-up backward from it like a pilot flaring before the runway.
- **The seven-second world.** On a delay, you live seven seconds in the future of
  the listener. The dump button exists so a caller's slip never reaches air; ride
  it with your hand near the button.
- **Format clock and brand voice.** The station is a product with a defined sound
  — the words, the topics, the energy band — and you play a consistent character
  the listener tuned in for.

## First Principles

The audience cannot see you; everything they know is carried by sound, and
silence reads as failure. The medium is one-directional and live, so a mistake
is gone the instant it's made — only followed, never recalled. Attention is
borrowed and instantly revocable: the dial is one button away. And broadcasting
is a licensed use of public spectrum, so the speech is never fully free.

## Questions Experts Constantly Ask

- How long is this intro, and where exactly is the post?
- Am I talking to one person or shouting at a crowd?
- What's my time to the next hard mark — the spot break, the join, the legal ID?
- Did I identify the sponsor the way the contract and the FCC require?
- Is anything in this copy or this caller going to get the station fined?
- What do I say if the next element doesn't fire — what's my safety net?
- Is the producer telling me something that changes the next thirty seconds?
- Does this sound like me, or like I'm reading?

## Decision Frameworks

**Should I talk over this intro?** Check the intro time. If it's long enough to
land the line clean before the post, talk and hit it. If it's tight or a cold
open (vocal from zero), stay out. When in doubt, button it short rather than
crash the post.

**Live caller or pre-screened?** On anything that can go sideways — a contest, an
open-line topic, a remote — run the delay and keep a hand on the dump button. One
slipped obscenity is a five- or six-figure indecency fine; the delay costs seven
seconds of nothing.

**Filling unexpected time** (a feed drops, a guest is late): never apologize into
dead air or announce the problem. Go to the next safe element — a promo, a
weather hit, a tease — and let the control room solve it off-mic.

**Breaking format for breaking news or EAS:** the alert and genuine
public-safety information override the music sweep and the bit. Drop the
personality, become the trusted voice, deliver the facts cleanly, then return to
format when it's safe.

## Workflow

Trigger: the shift, the event, or the on-air light. Before the mic opens, review
the log and clock, check what's scheduled in each break, mark up the copy
(pauses, emphasis, the brand pronunciation of the sponsor's name), and pre-read
anything unfamiliar aloud so no word ambushes you live. Set levels against the
bed. Open the mic. Talk to one person; hit the post; segue clean; run the stop
set; give the legal ID at the top of the hour. Take the producer's direction
through the IFB without breaking stride, trimming or stretching the talk to land
on the network join to the second. Run EAS the instant it fires. Between breaks,
line up the next element, scan ahead for trouble, breathe. Close the mic, log
what aired, note any make-goods owed, hand off cleanly to the next jock or the
network.

## Common Tradeoffs

- **Spontaneity vs. control.** The loosest, funniest read is the riskiest; you
  trade a little freedom for the guarantee you'll hit the post and stay legal.
- **Personality vs. format discipline.** Big personality builds a following but
  strains the clock and the brand; the best jocks find the maximum self the
  format can carry without breaking.
- **Talk vs. music** (or talk vs. the game). Listeners tuned in for the content,
  not for you — earn each break; say it in ten seconds, not forty.
- **Energy vs. authenticity.** Pump it too hard and it reads fake; too little,
  bored. The dial sits just above comfortable.
- **Speed vs. clarity.** Cramming copy to fit the time makes you unintelligible.
  Cut a word, don't race the clock.

## Rules of Thumb

- Smile when you talk; the listener hears it.
- Mark your copy: slash the pauses, underline the stresses, circle the brand
  name.
- One notch hotter than feels natural.
- Never say "um," "uh," or "dead air" — replace the stall with a breath.
- Back off the mic on plosives and big lines; lean in for the intimate ones.
- If you flub a word, keep going clean — never stop to apologize.
- Pronounce the sponsor's name the way the sponsor says it, every time.
- When in doubt, button it short and let the song breathe.
- Keep a hand near the cough button and, on a delay, the dump.

## Failure Modes

Stepping on the vocal — talking past the post and crashing into the singer.
Dead air because the next element wasn't cued. Reading copy like copy, so it
lands flat and salesy. Going "down the count" — losing track of time and missing
the network join or legal ID. Letting a caller's profanity reach air because the
hand wasn't on the dump. Voicing an indecency or naming a sponsor wrong and
triggering a fine. Letting energy sag late in a long shift. Talking too long and
burying the music. Announcing the technical problem instead of covering it.
Forgetting the top-of-hour ID.

## Anti-patterns

- **The crowd shout** — "Hey everybody out there in radioland," addressing a mass
  instead of one person.
- **The walk-over** — talking through the vocal because you didn't check the
  intro.
- **The apology spiral** — narrating every flub and dead spot, doubling the harm.
- **Copy voice** — the singsong, over-pronounced cadence that screams
  advertisement.
- **Riding the meter, not the ear** — watching the level meter instead of how it
  sounds.
- **Format drift** — slowly turning the station into your own thing until the
  brand dissolves.

## Vocabulary

- **Hit the post:** finish a talk-up exactly as the song's vocal begins.
- **Talk-up / ramp:** talking over a song's instrumental intro up to the vocal.
- **Dead air:** unintended silence on the air; the cardinal sin.
- **The board:** the audio console; faders/pots, mic channel, source selectors.
- **Pot / fader:** a volume control; "pot it up" means raise the level.
- **Cough button:** a switch that mutes the mic so a cough or aside never airs.
- **Dump button / profanity delay:** a broadcast delay (often seven seconds) and
  a control to drop offending audio before it airs.
- **IFB / talkback:** the producer's voice fed to the announcer's ear on-air
  ("interruptible foldback").
- **Bed:** instrumental music played under talk.
- **Sting / bumper:** a short branded audio element between segments.
- **Stop set / spot break:** the block of commercials.
- **Legal ID:** the station's call sign and city, required at the top of the
  hour.
- **EAS:** the Emergency Alert System; mandatory relay of certain alerts.
- **Segue:** a transition from one element to the next with no gap.
- **86 / drop:** to cut an element.
- **Voice tracking:** pre-recording breaks to assemble a "live" sound later.

## Tools

The microphone (large-diaphragm condenser or broadcast dynamic) on a boom, with
windscreen and pop filter, treated for proximity effect. Headphones to monitor
the cued source and ride your own level. The audio console (board) — analog or
digital. The automation/playout and logging system (RCS Zetta, WideOrbit,
NexGen) holding the music, spots, and clock. A profanity delay unit, the EAS
encoder/decoder, and the IFB/talkback link to the producer. A visible studio
clock and a countdown to the network join. Marked-up copy. For sports PA and
play-by-play: a spotter board, roster, and stat sheet.

## Collaboration

The producer or board op in the announcer's ear is the closest partner — feeding
cues, times, and changes through the IFB while the announcer keeps talking; the
two operate as one nervous system. The program director owns the format the
announcer must serve; traffic schedules the spots and owns the make-goods. The
news and weather voices hand off in tight, choreographed transitions; sales sets
the sponsor reads; engineering keeps the signal and the delay alive. In sports,
the play-by-play and color commentator trade on a rhythm, with the spotter and
truck's director keeping the call synced to the replay. A clean handoff is
invisible; a fumbled one is dead air for everyone.

## Ethics

Broadcasting uses public spectrum under license, so the obligation runs past the
employer to the public. Sponsor identification is a legal and ethical duty:
listeners have the right to know when they're being sold to, which is why payola
and plugola — taking undisclosed payment to plug a product or song — are illegal
and a betrayal of trust. Indecency and obscenity rules exist partly to protect
children; the announcer holds that line. The voice carries authority, so honesty
matters — don't read a lie as news, don't blur an ad into editorial. In live
moments, the power to inflame or calm a crowd is real; the trusted voice uses it
to steady, not to stampede.

## Scenarios

**The cold open that almost crashed the post.** A jock cues the next song: intro
time reads :08, but it's a cold open — the vocal starts at zero. No ramp. The
jock back-announces the previous song over the outro, lets the new song hit
clean, and saves the personality break for the next song, which has a generous
:19 ramp. The line lands exactly on the post there, and nobody at home heard a
decision get made — that's the point. When the structure surprises you, stay out
of the vocal.

**A caller starts to swear on a contest line.** It's a live call-in giveaway on
the seven-second delay, and the excited caller starts a sentence heading
somewhere unairable. The announcer's hand was already near the dump button —
standard practice on any open line. At the first hard syllable, the button drops
the offending audio, the delay reconstitutes, and the announcer talks over the
gap with energy: "And that's our winner — congratulations!" The license takes no
risk because judgment and hardware were both in place before they were needed:
the cost was a couple seconds of buffer, the avoided cost a six-figure indecency
fine.

**EAS fires during a music sweep.** Mid-song, the EAS tone triggers for a
tornado warning in the county; the format clock, the bit, the contest are now
irrelevant. The announcer pots down the music, lets the alert run as required,
then drops the entertainer character. The voice becomes flat, clear, and calm:
county, threat, time, the one action listeners should take, repeated once. No
speculation, no ad-lib that could mislead. Only when the National Weather
Service window is covered does the announcer return — gently — to format. The
job that moment was to be the trusted voice the license exists to guarantee, not
to entertain.

## Related Occupations

- **voice-actor** (adjacent): both use the voice as a precision instrument, but
  the voice actor inhabits a character while the announcer is themselves on a
  clock.
- **broadcast-journalist** (related): shares the live-to-air discipline, the
  clock, and the trusted-voice obligation, weighted toward reporting.
- **sound-engineer** (collaboration): keeps the signal, board, and delay alive so
  the announcer can work.
- **comedian** (adjacent): shares timing, the read of an audience, and ad-libbing
  within a structure.
- **event-planner** (collaboration): relies on the live PA announcer to run a
  crowd to a schedule.

## References

- FCC rules, 47 CFR Part 73 (broadcast services: indecency, sponsor ID, EAS,
  station identification).
- *Television and Radio Announcing* — Stuart Hyde.
- *Broadcast Voice Handbook* — Ann Utterback.
