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USA46R

Public Affairs Broadcast Specialist

Produces audio and video content for Army public affairs. Operates broadcast equipment, edits video and audio, and manages radio and television production for military media outlets and external release.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

You'll produce broadcast content for Army public affairs — shooting and editing video, operating radio equipment, and creating multimedia packages for internal military channels and external media release. The production skills (Adobe Premiere, camera operation, audio engineering) are directly translatable to civilian broadcast, corporate video production, and digital content creation. The military gives you access to operational environments and stories that civilian production teams pay to reach. Build the portfolio intentionally, get reps on real shoots, and the broadcast career path is genuinely viable.

What it's actually like

You produce broadcast content for the Army: television packages, radio spots, digital video, podcast content — whatever the current media consumption habits of the target audience require. The production skills are real: scripting, shooting, editing, interviewing on camera, working to deadline. The Army will give you professional-grade equipment and expect professional-grade output, which means you will learn quickly under pressure the way journalism school teaches you to learn in a classroom, except faster and sometimes in locations that don't have reliable electricity. The institutional communications context means your content serves Army messaging objectives, which is neither pure journalism nor pure creative work — it's somewhere between, and finding your own voice within that constraint is the professional development challenge of the MOS. Post-service, the broadcast production background transfers to local television news, digital content creation, corporate video production, and documentary work. The equipment familiarity, the deadline culture, and the ability to produce broadcast-quality content in imperfect conditions are competitive advantages. You'll need a civilian portfolio that shows what you can do outside the Army's content framework, but the foundation is genuine.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Public Affairs Broadcast Specialist14w
Fort Meade (MD)
Radio and TV production, broadcast journalism, audio engineering, studio and field operations, command broadcasting.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.

Public Relations Specialists

Strong match
$67,440$40,730$120,220/yr median
Job market: Average (6%)

Training and Development Specialists

Related field
$63,080$37,850$106,620/yr median
Job market: Faster than average (8%)

Management Analysts

Related field
$99,410$59,980$163,760/yr median
Job market: Faster than average (11%)

Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program, retrieved Feb 2026. BLS.gov cannot vouch for the data or analyses derived from these data after the data have been retrieved from BLS.gov.

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