Live on tape

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The so-called live-on-tape process describes a TV or radio broadcast that is recorded under live transmission conditions (e.g. with an audience and music groups). This recording will be broadcast at a later date. As a rule, minor changes are made before the recording is broadcast (e.g. short cuts during set-up and conversion phases, audio post-processing) so that the temporal and spatial continuity is maintained for the television viewer as with a real live broadcast. Examples of this are Neo Magazin Royale and, in the past, TV total , Circus HalliGalli and Die Harald-Schmidt-Show . Such programs are often not broadcast live, but recorded a few hours before they are broadcast.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Joachim-Felix Leonhard, Hans-Werner Ludwig , Dietrich Schwarze, Erich Strabner: Media Studies - A manual for the development of media and forms of communication. 2nd subband. Verlag Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2001, ISBN 978-3110163261 , p. 2455.
  2. Eric Kartens, Jörg Schütte: Praxishandbuch Fernsehen: How TV transmitters work. 1st edition, VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften / GWV Fachverlage GmbH, Wiesbaden, ISBN 978-3531145051 , p. 181.