Wiggles422
Member
- :
- MSP #654
(rofl)NRRfrogmanP5 said:i think u should make a stop in chicago...its kinda on the way
(rofl)NRRfrogmanP5 said:i think u should make a stop in chicago...its kinda on the way
but i have to my friend..not even the enchanting draw of your daughters can keep me..bazooka joe said:don't go(sad2)
oh well!SpicyMchaggis said:but i have to my friend..not even the enchanting draw of your daughters can keep me..
whoa... if they ever come down to orlando, PM me. I'll show'em a good timebazooka joe said:oh well!
good lord man... good job.bazooka joe said:oh well!
mp5jeff said:have you been to full sail yet? it's quite a badass school, was going to go there for audio engineering a while back...
When you guys talk about a studio do you mean for recording or broadcasting? I have a feelings its both but would like to know for sure.rjmhotrod said:Full Sail is a good school, but make no mistake - you still have to pay your dues when you graduate regardless of the school you attend. You still have to work in a studio for nothing (or next to it) for about the first year just to get a foot in the door at most major studios. If you know your way around a studio any at all, just go to one of the better studios in Miami and beg for a job as an intern and then learn all you can - skip school. You'll save a buttload of money. I graduated with a B.S. in Music Industry with a minor in Accounting, but decided to go the way of ENG/EFP audio because I couldn't afford to work for nothing to break into Nashville, LA, NY or wherever.
yea i know all about it trust me, i know lots of people in the business(in tennessee none the less lol), so i knew what it was all about, but i changed my mind and am going to goto law school instead!rjmhotrod said:Full Sail is a good school, but make no mistake - you still have to pay your dues when you graduate regardless of the school you attend. You still have to work in a studio for nothing (or next to it) for about the first year just to get a foot in the door at most major studios. If you know your way around a studio any at all, just go to one of the better studios in Miami and beg for a job as an intern and then learn all you can - skip school. You'll save a buttload of money. I graduated with a B.S. in Music Industry with a minor in Accounting, but decided to go the way of ENG/EFP audio because I couldn't afford to work for nothing to break into Nashville, LA, NY or wherever.
ahemtraitorhound said:NEPOC South eh. . . North Eastern Protege Owners Club South. . ..hmmm . . . .SEPOC?
bazooka joe said:oh well!
1sty said:When you guys talk about a studio do you mean for recording or broadcasting? I have a feelings its both but would like to know for sure.
What is it that they teach anyways. I work with a guy that has some 2 year reocrding degree or something like that and I have to fallow him around and basicly undo everything he does EQ wise or audio tuning wise. IF I go to a site and I know he has been there and there is an audio problem, often, just bypassing the EQ fixes a world of issues.
mp5jeff said:yea i know all about it trust me, i know lots of people in the business(in tennessee none the less lol), so i knew what it was all about, but i changed my mind and am going to goto law school instead!
Glowspeedp5 said:Communication field is a very hard field to get your feet planted into. You have to do millions of jobs just to be an intern. I have a BS in mass communication with a minor in computer science. Tampa is a hard area dur to USF and the college kids coming out underpricing us people that been in the industry for 5 years.
Plus myself coming from the DC area they are afraid I would want tons of money...