NOUN
- a telephone call to a radio station or a television station in which the caller participates in the on-going program
How To Use call-in In A Sentence
- That is a testament to the teams' hard work over the last few years and their expertise in this realm, " program manager Jaime Engdahl told reporters during a call-in conference for the press.
- The DJ was fired after a heated exchange on air with a call-in listener.
- Local people in trouble like to turn to Ye Sha, the hostess of a night call-in talk programme called ‘Sunrise companion.’
- The grating broadcasts sometimes switched to tapes of radio call-in shows and other background sounds of an electronic civilization.
- More complex systems have built-in overrides using call-in, occupancy sensing or reaction to out-of-spec temperatures that turn on systems for zones having special needs.
- In rock or rap, this would only raise eyebrows for its hokiness; in the world of country, it's a call-in-show controversy and a boardroom crisis. Good Old Grrrls
- Every time the telecon is opened up to the call-in participants, the audio goes into echo/feedback mode. ESMD media Telecon notes - NASA Watch
- The genre reached its college-football apotheosis in the Paul Finebaum Radio Network, a Birmingham, Ala.,-based program perhaps best known for carrying the call-in confession of the Auburn tree poisoner earlier this year. The Game of the Century of the Week
- Newspapers and radio call-in shows were awash with the rage of people who spared little thought for the judge's legal and scientific hair-splitting.
- So they flew to D.C. to meet with him, called his office daily to complain about it, and organized a constituent call-in drive.