Occupation

Broadcast Master Control Operator

Shift-work pay reference for Broadcast Master Control Operator in Television & Radio Broadcasting.

Median hourly wage
$24.30/hr
Annual FT equivalent
$50,544
Common schedule
Permanent Overnight 8-Hour Shift
Overtime rule
40-hour FLSA workweek (1.5x over 40 hours)
Break policy
1x30min unpaid
Industry
Television & Radio Broadcasting

A Broadcast Master Control Operator working in Television & Radio Broadcasting typically follows the Permanent Overnight 8-Hour Shift pattern. Base pay around $24.30 per hour translates to roughly $972.00 for a standard 40-hour workweek and an annual full-time equivalent near $50,544 before any overtime, shift differential, or premium pay. For deeper context on how this role is paid across employers, see this industry payroll reference.

Overtime for this role is governed by 40-hour FLSA workweek (1.5x over 40 hours). When the threshold is crossed, the overtime rate is approximately $36.45 per hour at the median wage. Employers must document worked time accurately on the timecard, and break deductions must follow the recorded policy: 1x30min unpaid. Compare current premium ranges in the shift differential survey for Television & Radio Broadcasting.

Because this position is part of a 24/7 operation, real take-home pay can shift considerably from week to week. Shift differentials commonly add between one and four dollars per hour for evenings and overnights. Holiday coverage, mandatory holdovers when relief is unavailable, and on-call callbacks all push the gross higher. On the other hand, unpaid meal periods, split-shift gaps, and missed punches can reduce paid time. Annual benchmarks are tracked in the Broadcast Master Control Operator staffing benchmark.

Use the calculators on ShiftClock to model a Broadcast Master Control Operator's real schedule. Start with the matching schedule pattern page to see how a full rotation lays out, then run the relevant overtime or shift-differential calculator to convert the schedule into pay. The role appears in our directory under Television & Radio Broadcasting, alongside the other shift-work occupations that share the same staffing model.

Recordkeeping is critical. Employers must keep accurate timecards under FLSA section 11(c), and workers should compare their pay stubs against an independent calculation each pay period. ShiftClock is designed to make that second calculation fast: pick the schedule, drop in the punches, and confirm that the regular hours, overtime hours, and any premium pay match what the employer paid.

Open the pre-loaded calculator

The Broadcast Master Control Operator shift hours & pay calculator is pre-loaded with the median wage above and the typical schedule pattern. Adjust the inputs to model your specific shift.

Sample week of pay

If a typical workweek for this role is about 32.0 compensable hours, the regular portion would total 32.0 hours at $24.30/hr, with 0.0 hours of overtime at $36.45/hr. Combined gross before differentials: $777.60.

Other roles in Television & Radio Broadcasting