Comment by 013a
6 years ago
Well, if anyone were going to do it, you'd think no one would be surprised about it being the "National Public Radio"
6 years ago
Well, if anyone were going to do it, you'd think no one would be surprised about it being the "National Public Radio"
Accessibility still matters, or should still matter even if you’re a radio station, but probably especially if you’re a news radio station.
NPR is fantastic when it comes to accessibility by providing transcripts. I linked the page thinking the transcript will come later as they usually do. But turns out it was a wrong link. See elsewhere for the correct link.
How many TV shows have audio descriptions of non verbal parts of what you see on screen?
More than zero. It's called closed captioning, isn't it? I've quite often seen closed-captioning that put brief written descriptions of non-verbal depictions in bracket, and it's not entirely common either
https://www.automaticsync.com/captionsync/what-qualifies-as-... (see section: "High Quality Captioning")
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