But also because it looked neat.
He switched to a more modern mic when he switched networks. I, for one, was disappointed.
…and you stopped caring mid-way through the title.
I didn’t stop caring midway through the title. I was fully invested the entire way through. Little tidbits of information like that are cool.
My attempt to find the most boring esoteric fact I know has failed.
Yeah, you’re going to keep searching. I second that this one was too interesting!
Jokes on you, I’m a huge Letterman and vintage recording equipment fan.
EDIT: Reading the comments leads me to believe that those who frequent Lemmy, including myself, might have a far larger appreciation of esoteric knowledge than expected.
David Letterman and microphones? Please, do go on.
I don’t have any other esoteric David Letterman microphone facts, but another esoteric David Letterman fact is that he was a C student at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana and has established a scholarship there for incoming students with no grade requirement attached to it beyond being able to have a high enough grade to attend the university in the first place.
He also donated the university’s current communications building.
And a third esoteric David Letterman fact is that he used to be a weatherman on WTHR in Indianapolis before he hit the big time.
No, I am not a David Letterman super fan. I just picked up these facts for some reason. Although being born and raised in Indiana (and currently living there again) helps.
Personally, I can’t think of a single moment from David Letterman’s entire talk show history that tops his cameo in Cabin Boy.
I bet he was the best weather man.
This was my favorite Letterman moment. When Drew Barrymore flashed him for his birthday.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
When Drew Barrymore flashed him for his birthday.
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Hey! I use a modern day ribbon microphone. A MXL RI44, it’s a lot cheaper than the DX-77 haha. I used to stream full-time and I found the soft pattern suited my deepish voice really well.
Ribbons are great sensitive mics for dialogue/talk but not super great for singing as the very thin filament inside can actually break if yell too loud in it. Mine also requires a cloud lifter “preamp” device to amplify the XLR signal before going into my amp with phantom 48v power. Otherwise my audio device barely picked up a signal they’re that sensitive haha. But it sounds great!
Cheaper, but doesn’t have the cool factor. And yeah, I used to do VO and I used to do it with either a 77 or a 44 at the studio where I was managing, but I couldn’t afford it when I struck out on my own. I do have a Neumann U87 large diaphragm condenser which sounds damn good though.
And I wouldn’t plug a ribbon mic directly into the 48v anyway. The power could literally break the ribbon. Or at least that’s what I’ve always been told.
My unrealistic “if I were rich” dream would be to open an all pre-1950s technology recording studio. Mics would be things like 77s and 44s, the board would have only pots, no faders, and it would record straight to a vinyl lathe. No multitrack recording, no tape, not even stereo. If you want to digitally master that vinyl somewhere else, go for it.
I actually looked into actually doing in back in the 90s and back then, it would have cost me over $200,000. I was in my 20s and there was no way I could get that kind of business loan, so it never happened. I wouldn’t even want to know what it would cost now, but I would do it in a heartbeat if I could afford to. I think it would be pretty popular with a certain type of musician. Especially if they played something like folk or roots or blues.
Oh man, I would be so on board with that. As long as there’s vacuum tubes.
There would have to be.
dang, i though studio condensators were sensitive, but i have a pretty basic mic amp with no external pre-amps and it’s already un-usable because it picks up EVERYTHING around you. A ribbon must be crazy, how would you even handle that at home? Do you use a fully sound planned room?
Hm, I wonder if my mic could use a preamp…
That first picture looks like the cover of a 1980s computer magazine, but I just can’t figure out which one.
wtf how did the wizard make it into shaun’s office
Don’t you put words in my
mouthcaringOkay but your before and after pictures are in the wrong order.