I need to give this a bit of a preamble. I was born in 1969 so I spent my childhood and early teens in the Cold War. And like many of my age and earlier, it was always in the back of our minds that we could one day look up and see the missiles in the skies.
A chief element of this "conditioning of terror" was the Emergency Broadcast System. An updating of an earlier system called Conelred, it was a system that was designed to warn people about emergencies like natural disasters, storms, etc. But we all knew its primary purpose was to warn of nuclear attack. Although I lived in Canada, from about 1978 onwards we had cable TV feeds from American broadcasters, and thus were indoctrinated into the wonderful world of the Emergency Broadcast System.
Every few days, American TV stations would run tests of the system. Like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntxxxj69UxA
Usually these aired in the afternoon, but I remember being woken up by one late at night and nearly s*itting myself. I only ever experienced one genuine activation, and that occurred when the 911 system went down. Needless to say it was anticlimactic. But even as recently as 5 years ago I still found myself with a momentary flutter of freak when an alert system test came on.
(The wording of these tests varied. Usually they used generic terms like "in case of an emergency" but I remember one North Dakota broadcaster added "including a nuclear attack" to its test script.)
Here's an infamous incident from 1971 when the EBS was activated in one city by accident when the wrong code number was sent out and a radio station had to follow the procedure. This is fascinating stuff:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikL2T743w6c
A similar thing happened on Chicago TV a few years ago:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2F5a2qd0J3s
After the Cold War, the use of the EBS as a televised air raid siren (for many years, the Canadian version of EBS - which was intended solely as an attack warning - did feature a recording of an air raid siren, too) fell into disuse and it evolved into a more general warning system that in some areas even broadcasts Amber (child abduction) alerts. A second alert tone, even more creepy than the buzz tone, has been added in some areas (this following clip is a mockup but is included so you can hear the sound, which is genuine):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3C0SebTLkj8
But I might have encountered an even creepier new innovation. In Alberta a new digital emergency alert system is being introduced, and earlier this evening it was activated to warn people north of Calgary that a tornado was approaching (interestingly this was only 5 minutes after William and Kate arrived here). While TV broadcasters actually heard the emergency warning sound in the link above, some Internet users would have encountered the recording seen at the top of this news page (press play to hear it):
http://www.calgarysun.com/2011/07/07/destructive-tornado-strikes-near-sundre
My god, could they have chosen a more freaky computer voice to make the announcement? What's wrong with good old Victoria from Microsoft Word? At least the old-style EBS/EAS alerts usually had a live voice come on. Yeesh!
So fess up - anyone over the age of 35 here who still gets freaked out when an Amber alert comes on because they remain hardwired to expect the EAS/EBS tones/buzz to signify Armageddon? Or, at least, Very Bad Stuff Going Down?
Alex
A chief element of this "conditioning of terror" was the Emergency Broadcast System. An updating of an earlier system called Conelred, it was a system that was designed to warn people about emergencies like natural disasters, storms, etc. But we all knew its primary purpose was to warn of nuclear attack. Although I lived in Canada, from about 1978 onwards we had cable TV feeds from American broadcasters, and thus were indoctrinated into the wonderful world of the Emergency Broadcast System.
Every few days, American TV stations would run tests of the system. Like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntxxxj69UxA
Usually these aired in the afternoon, but I remember being woken up by one late at night and nearly s*itting myself. I only ever experienced one genuine activation, and that occurred when the 911 system went down. Needless to say it was anticlimactic. But even as recently as 5 years ago I still found myself with a momentary flutter of freak when an alert system test came on.
(The wording of these tests varied. Usually they used generic terms like "in case of an emergency" but I remember one North Dakota broadcaster added "including a nuclear attack" to its test script.)
Here's an infamous incident from 1971 when the EBS was activated in one city by accident when the wrong code number was sent out and a radio station had to follow the procedure. This is fascinating stuff:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikL2T743w6c
A similar thing happened on Chicago TV a few years ago:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2F5a2qd0J3s
After the Cold War, the use of the EBS as a televised air raid siren (for many years, the Canadian version of EBS - which was intended solely as an attack warning - did feature a recording of an air raid siren, too) fell into disuse and it evolved into a more general warning system that in some areas even broadcasts Amber (child abduction) alerts. A second alert tone, even more creepy than the buzz tone, has been added in some areas (this following clip is a mockup but is included so you can hear the sound, which is genuine):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3C0SebTLkj8
But I might have encountered an even creepier new innovation. In Alberta a new digital emergency alert system is being introduced, and earlier this evening it was activated to warn people north of Calgary that a tornado was approaching (interestingly this was only 5 minutes after William and Kate arrived here). While TV broadcasters actually heard the emergency warning sound in the link above, some Internet users would have encountered the recording seen at the top of this news page (press play to hear it):
http://www.calgarysun.com/2011/07/07/destructive-tornado-strikes-near-sundre
My god, could they have chosen a more freaky computer voice to make the announcement? What's wrong with good old Victoria from Microsoft Word? At least the old-style EBS/EAS alerts usually had a live voice come on. Yeesh!
So fess up - anyone over the age of 35 here who still gets freaked out when an Amber alert comes on because they remain hardwired to expect the EAS/EBS tones/buzz to signify Armageddon? Or, at least, Very Bad Stuff Going Down?
Alex