Thanks for tuning in!

This is the radio bumper that I made! Also, what a fun term, radio bumper! I had no idea that this had a name.

Do you like it? I honestly wasn’t sure what to do! As any good millennial (or Generation Z depending on who you ask), I took to the internet! I just Googled some examples to help me think of something. I am honestly not the most creative so it took me a bit! I was not really sure what type of sound that I wanted, so I searched for ‘weird’ sounds, but that turned up more scary/horror type sounds. So then I searched ‘cool’ sounds, and found this! I cut it up, and used it to surround my talking.

I used freesound.org for the sound of this video.

 

Radio Bumper

Here it is. I got to choose two different songs I liked to add to my masterpiece. I hope the DS 106 radio uses my number to let listeners know what smooth toons they been hearing ?

Making our own Radio

I was a little worried about this Create a DS106 Radio Bumper activity at first, but it ended up being kind of fun. I was overwhelmed with the week as a whole because I have no experience with audio editing or recording, but taking it piece by piece has been helpful.

At first, I thought about what pieces I needed to put in the bumper. I wanted to say the name of the radio station, a slogan, and have some catchy music. I recorded myself in iMovie saying the station that listeners are currently listening to as one audio clip. I then recorded myself with the slogan I came up with- “where learning meets sound meets fun.”

I then went to YouTube’s free music Audio Library to find some catchy music for the bumper. I looked for Bright music, and found a song named 8 Year Anniversary that had a good beat and was kind of funky. I cut a small segment of it for the bumper and then adjusted where I wanted the name of the radio show and the slogan to go. I wanted to have intro music, mention the name, have a little more music, then the slogan, and more music at the end. I wanted the upbeat part of the music as well. I played around until I liked the way it was set up. iMovie automatically made the music softer where the audio clips of my voice were. I also softened the volume at the end to have it fade out slightly rather than abruptly ending. When I finally decided I liked the bumper, I exported it as a file and uploaded it to SoundCloud. I took a screenshot of the DS106 Radio symbol for the image. This assignment ended up being more fun than I expected!

Lets get bumpin!

The radio bumper I created was after I listened to the station for a few hours. I couldn’t really get a theme, but I was vague in my welcome. Also, is this a Christian station?

The radio show is cool, and the guy doing it seems pretty nice. It’s very random, and I really wonder if he has a script, or if it’s all just random stuff off the top of his head. This was also on one of the audio assignments for four stars.

DS106 Radio Bumper

For this assignment, were to create our own radio bumper for the DS106 radio. I used audacity to put the assignment together and download royalty free music from purple planet. I then recorded myself saying “You’re listening to DS106 radio. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the show. Make sure to tweet along using the hashtag DS106!”

This is what I made.

 

The Legendary DS106 Radio

This week, everyone in DS106 was tasked with creating a radio Bumper for DS106 Radio. Though it’s an assignment in the assignment bank, it doesn’t count for stars this week!

For this assignment, I had to first create a script for myself to follow, because I knew if I didn’t create one, it would end up messy; I’m not great with improvising any speech, even one as short as this one. For my 10-20 second bumper, I decided to simply introduce myself and the ‘Legendary DS106’ and ask the listener to stay tuned for more music and stories. I decided to include both music and stories in my bumper to make it a general one, since I know DS106 radio often includes music and story broadcasts, and no matter what’s being played there, there’s a story to be told.

The most difficult part of this assignment, was then finding music that wasn’t copyrighted to add to the background. Using freesound.org I was able to find a Fantasy Orchestra piece by user bigmanjoe, so credit goes out to him for my background music. I chose this music because I thought the fantasy element would be fitting of our theme and the music slowly swells into a more epic tone, which I wanted to convey for DS106 radio in our semester of legends and myths.

Since I now have some previous experience with Audacity, it was easier than ever before to edit my voiceover and the music together. I visited this quick Audacity tutorial to edit the music track to be quieter, so you could still hear my voice. I’d recommend you give that tutorial a watch if you’re having the same issue! My philosophy in life is, when in doubt, always google a YouTube tutorial.

 

You’re Listening to DS106 Radio

This was my first assignment using Audacity, so I was a little worried about using it. I used freesound.org to download the radio tuning and background music. I added the tuning/static to add a sound effect and to make the bumper have something different than just my voice. I then looked through the music and found some jazz that was more upbeat and would be a good contrast to the static sound. I then edited them and my voice to fit together in audacity. This was a really good beginning project for me to try and I really liked getting to listen to all of the free sounds we can use.

Until next time,

Emily

My DS106 Radio Bumper

This is my Create a DS106 Radio Bumper assignment. I wasn’t quite sure what to say other than “You are listening to DS106 radio,” so I just made up that a new series would be starting with a live tweet-along. I added some rock music to the background & turned it down a bit so it wasn’t overpowering. I think it turned out alright!! It isn’t quite 10 seconds, but I felt like if I added more I would be rambling or talking excessively slow.

DS106 Radio

This was fun! Grabbed a free sound and used my own voice to record this on audacity.

Staaaay Classy

Hi!

So after getting frustrated enough to want to drop kick my MacBook across the room, I finally had fun! This was a cool assignment, and my wife says that I have a future in radio so there’s that. I obviously began by getting familiar with Audacity. I remembered using it in high school (to make a music track for a girl, kid you not) so it didn’t take me too long to get warm to it again. Following that I went onto freesound.org to find a backtrack for the radio bumper. I knew that I wanted it to be slow so it didn’t take me too long to find a Beethoven knockoff. My thought process behind this is that being it’s about stories, I would want a old school eclectic feel to it and thats why the Beethoven knockoff was perfect! I think that this short bumper tells the story of a radio station you would tune into to relax, and slow down. Also there was a short play on words because this was made for a class, and I said “stay classy”. Also there’s the ode to Anchorman, obviously.

I exported the song into my Audacity file, cut out the extra with the cut tool, muted the remainder (so then when I recorded using my computers speaker I wouldn’t have two songs recorded), and then recorded my personal audio. After that was cleaned up it was a simple process of exporting and putting it onto Soundcloud!

I thought this project went really well, and like I said I had fun with it. In the future I might figure out a way to make it longer or do something a little more creative with it. I don’t know how to put sound effects into Audacity yet but I will figure that out and probably do that if I had to do this all over again.