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VOICE IN BROADCASTING:Speech, Accent, Loudness, Stress

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Introduction to Broadcasting ­ MCM 411
VU
LESSON 11
VOICE IN BROADCASTING
Radio broadcast is essentially based on voice. Listeners know hardly about the face, dressing
up and at times the age of the person whose voice they are listening to. Most broadcasters
have their peculiar voice ­ soft, hard, harsh or sharp. It is the producer who decides which
type of voice suits what type of broadcast if they fulfill other requirements as a broadcaster.
Since radio is a voice based mean of communication, it is needless to over emphasize the fact
that people with clarity of voice are supposed to be venturing as broadcaster.
But quality voice is by far a relative term. Every voice uttered may stand to convey some
definite meanings. It becomes responsibility of producers to judge a voice for a particular
situation and program where it serves the purpose of effective-communication. In fact training
in usage of different voices may open the gate for an ordinary voice to become a voice-to-be-
heard from a particular radio station. For example; a person has a very mature accent of
Sindhi language, he/she may be chosen for a typical Sindhi program which may build up its
own audience. So is for people in other languages, provided, they meet other criteria as
broadcasters.
We now look at some of the voice characteristics which a good broadcaster, as well as a
producer, must keep in mind while producing any piece of broadcasting.
Speech
The foremost thing for a broadcaster is to know the language he/she is talking in. There is
hardly any fun to stand in front of a mike if the speaker is not familiar adequately with the
language he/she is to deliver the message in. A mere knowledge of ordinary level of language
does not suffice the need for broadcasting for at times, the broadcaster is bound to encounter
a word which requires specific pronunciation ­ just as in English language there are scores of
words and phrases which belong to other languages like sine qua non (outcome) or prima
Donna (show off). There are so many in Urdu. Since you are more working for a society where
Urdu is spoken and understood more than other languages, and some times the script carries
verses, knowledge of this language a cut above the ordinary becomes extremely inevitable.
Accent
For a standard broadcaster it is a must to talk in an accent which is socially acceptable. This
means highest number of listeners should agree with the pronunciation, colloquial speech and
the dialect. Any deviation from this position in a standard program like newsreel, or running
commentary on a test match, or a regular announcement in between programs may stimulate
laughter and the anger as well. In both cases this will cast a shadow on the broadcast quality
of your program.
Loudness
Loudness is a unique voice character. There is a standard voice-level at which human beings
talk to each other. If you speak louder, or cut down your voice volume, it may lead to al
together different meanings. For example, you say some one "be-off" in a low voice; this at
times may feel affectionate. But if you utter the same phrase at the top of your voice it certainly
communicates much more than ordinary meanings... and may lead to an ugly situation. Loud
means rage, low means polite. You may laugh at normal loudness. If you do so at a higher
volume, people may even think you as mad. In dramas this characteristic of voice leads to
more meanings
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Introduction to Broadcasting ­ MCM 411
VU
Stretch
Voice has this extraordinary quality that one can stretch a word to a desired length to give it
different meanings. Think of QIRA'AT of holy verses. And think also about the words sung, you
may discover a whole genre of using words for completely different purposes.
Stress
Like stretching, stress on a word, or a syllabi ­ like "I will see you", changes the meaning of
speech. Not only this, stress on a particular word in a sentence fetches the same result.
Look at the following elaboration;
Nadeem will go to Islamabad next week.
Change stress, or stress more Nadeem,
Islamabad, next and week, while keeping standard stress on the rest. Every time you are likely
to get different meanings.
Pauses
Silence in between a regular speech ­ pauses as it is called as a term in verbal
communication, enhances the meaning of a word, situation and attraction of the broadcast. A
narration punctuated with pauses is just the other way you may think of a news-reading. This
dramatizes a situation, obviously to impart different purposes. But we also apply pauses in a
standard narration like newsreel when we have to change subject of news from one to
another.
There are more characteristics attached to a voice like sharpness, hackling, mincing words
and whispering. All these are used in different areas of broadcasting not only to add color but
also the meaning. It is always the skill of a producer to assign a certain piece of broadcasting
to a particular voice so that the program succeeds in building up the listeners all around.
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Table of Contents:
  1. BROADCASTING:Historical Facts about Radio, Wireless and Radio
  2. CLASSIFICATION OF PROGRAMS:NEWS, Language, Sensationalizing
  3. CURRENT AFFAIRS:Talk Shows, Discussions, Seminars, Live Shows
  4. OUTDOOR BROADCASTING I:VIP Movement, Suddenly Assigned Events
  5. OUTDOOR BROADCASTING II:Pakistan Day March Past, General Elections
  6. CURTAIN RAISER:Political, Financial, Sports, Academics
  7. RADIO FEATURE:Personality Features, Features on Events
  8. MUSICAL PROGRAMS:Classical Music, Light and Film Music, Folk Music
  9. RADIO DOCUMENTARY:Narrative, Dramatized, Imagination, Close to places
  10. DISC JOCKEY:Women in Focus, Daily/ Weekly Division, Making Titles
  11. VOICE IN BROADCASTING:Speech, Accent, Loudness, Stress
  12. NOISE:Physical, Medium itself, Problem at sender’s end, Semantics
  13. STUDIO:Drama Studio, Studios for Talk Shows/ Discussions, Music Studios,
  14. RADIO DRAMA I:Stage Dramas, Early Radio Dramas, Ethics, Classification
  15. RADIO DRAMA II:Selection of director, The Playwrights, Script, Voices
  16. ADVERTISEMENT – INCOME GENERATION:Similarities, More Analysis
  17. ADVERTISERS’ APPROACH:Dramatized, Dialogue based, News
  18. FM – A NEW GENERATION IN BROADCASTING:Low Cost, The Difference
  19. MICROPHONE TO TRANSMITTER:Amplifiers, Modulator, Transmitter
  20. WRITING SCRIPT FOR RADIO BROADCAST:NEWS Script, Interviews
  21. INTERACTIVE BROADCASTING:On-line, E-mails, Interview, Views in News
  22. REVISION:CURRENT AFFAIRS, RADIO FEATURE, MUSICAL PROGRAMS
  23. HISTORY OF TELEVISION:Early History, The Black & White Images, Color Television
  24. PAKISTAN TELEVISION (PTV):The Excitement, Timing, Live Broadcast
  25. BROADCASTING LAWS:Laws in the 19th century, Press Council of Pakistan
  26. REPLICAS OF RADIO BROADCAST:The Staff, News Reading, Programming
  27. NEW SCRIPT WRITING AND DIRECTION TECHNIQUES:TV Script
  28. SETS:Permanent Sets, Hot & Cover Sets, Special Sets, Economical
  29. CAMERA SHOTS – THE VISUAL LANGUAGE:Angle Shots, Movement shots
  30. LIGHTS IN VISUAL BROADCASTING:Light Temperature, Light and Distance
  31. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR:NEWS and Interviews, Dramas and Music
  32. BROADCASTING AND MEDIA IMPERIALISM:The truth in the debate
  33. ENVIRONMENT OF TV BROADCAST:Optical Illusions, POV, Depth of Field
  34. BUDGET:First Part, Second Part, Third Part, The Sponsors
  35. COMPARISON AND CONTRAST OF DIFFERENT RADIO AND TV FORMATS:TV NEWS
  36. CURRENT AFFAIRS – FROM RADIO TO TV:Seminars, Interviews
  37. PRE-PRODUCTION:Brain Storming, Scripting a new program, Approval
  38. PRODUCTION & POST-PRODUCTION:Booking Shifts, Rehearsals
  39. TV ADVERTISEMENTS – MONEY WITH ENTERTAINMENT:Early Phase, Getting Spots
  40. ENIGMA OF MORE CHANNELS:The Investment, Fresh Ideas, Closure of channels
  41. ANCHORPERSON:Appearance and Confidence, Job Opportunities
  42. COMPARISON BETWEEN RADIO AND TV BROADCAST:The Difference, Script
  43. TERRESTRIAL TO SATELLITE TO CABLE TV:Cable Network, CD Channels
  44. CAREER IN BROADCASTING:Production, Direction, Lighting Director, Script Writer
  45. REVISION (LESSON 23 TO 44):Broadcasting Laws, PEMRA, Budget