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Broadcast Announcer

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AVG. SALARY

$48,520

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

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Even as it killed the radio star, the era of music video gave birth to a new kind of celebrity: the video jockey, or VJ for short.

As the original VJs soon learned, being a video jockey involves much more than introducing videos to a television audience. In the 20 years since MTV first aired, VJs have become cultural icons in their own right. It's a heady position to find yourself in, as both former VJ Laurie Brown and current VJ Chris Booker will tell you.

Currently a television arts reporter, Brown has seen the industry from almost every angle there is -- from fronting a band in the late 1970s to donning shades for a role in the Corey Hart video Sunglasses at Night. But she's still best known for her six-year stint as one of the original VJs on a Canadian music video channel, a time she looks back on with both fondness and insight.

"It was a lot freer back then," she remarks, "in that the VJ had a say in programming choices. I could pick a lot of the videos: there was much less of a stringent play list." That enabled VJs to comment critically on the videos they introduced and to have fun creating themes.

Like Brown, Booker went to work in the industry straight out of high school. "I started in a real small-time radio station," he says.

He didn't stay "small time" for long, though. While still in his early 20s, he moved to New York City and became a disc jockey at one of the Big Apple's leading radio stations, K-Rock, where his pal and fellow VJ Carson Daly also got his start.

"One of the radio consultants took me under his wing," he says, "and this guy ended up getting a job at MTV. Through him, about three years into my radio job, they contacted me about doing MTV2 and then some shows on MTV."

While Booker enjoys his three-day-a-week stint as a VJ, he still thinks his work at the radio station has some definite advantages over the more glamorous gig. "As a VJ," he quips, "I have to shave. But seriously, you've got to worry about your looks."

Disc jockeys also have more freedom, he says, and more interaction with their audience. He readily admits that some of the videos he has to introduce are not that good., "I don't like everything I play."

Booker works off of scripts prepared with the help of two writers. "It's a lot of memorization," he says.

Brown was there in the mid-1980s when music television began to lose its rough edges. "I really watched the culture...change," she says, "from one that felt underground and adventurous to one that realized that pop music was a money machine."

She recalls the shift happening after studies showed that viewers were much younger than first thought. "On the one hand," she says, "it was expressing the best ideals of rock -- to not be afraid of who you are, to not follow the crowd."

On the other hand, she says, it had to follow the rules of commercial television, and she watched "the commercials going from ads for beer and cars to ads for chips and video games."

In the economics of music television, the viewers create the demand and the artists supply what they want. Serving as a kind of go-between, VJs have the opportunity to see the stars as they really are.

"The media are 90 percent of the time wrong. Most of [the stars] are really nice guys," says Booker -- even someone as notorious as Marilyn Manson. "The relationships you can form with the bands, and the fact that you can turn on the TV and say, 'Those are my friends,' -- that's really cool."

Occasionally, VJs have to contend with a rowdy rock star or a pouting prima donna. Faced with such situations, Brown says her instincts as a journalist would automatically take over.

"If it was on tape, I showed it. Sometimes it could be something very subtle -- just the way their attitude was." She recalls several of these "gotcha" moments happening during an interview with pop diva Whitney Houston.

Like rock stars, VJs must learn to deal with fame. It can be the job's biggest perk or its greatest occupational hazard.

The one thing about fame, though, is that it doesn't last forever. "Being a VJ really doesn't prepare you for a lot of other jobs," says Brown. "A lot of VJs step off from television and into the abyss." In her case, a background in music journalism enabled her to move on to other things.

Even if it only lasts a short time, most VJs see their on-air run as the experience of a lifetime. Brown remains grateful for what it gave her. "The work of an artist and the life of an artist is so interesting to me," she says. "To be around that kind of passion and commitment is a real honor."

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