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Paul Rusling is an author, broadcaster, consultant and engineer who ran East Yorkshire public house and restaurant owner, disc jockey who broadcast as 'Paul Alexander'. Life Paul Rusling attended school in Hull, England and in his spare time performed as a disc jockey in clubs and ballrooms. He studied radio engineering at Hull College of Technology and became a ship's radio officer. On joining Radio Caroline he hosted the station's breakfast programme and he then moved to London where he and his wife Anne managed several pubs and clubs. In 1981 Rusling became a broadcast consultant and worked on several radio stations, including Laser 558. Rusling served as a consultant to broadcast projects in the Middle East, Europe and Scandinavia and assisted with license applications for stations in the United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Poland and Russia, including work with Nozema, Sky Radio, Classic FM, and Radio 10 Gold. He was a director of several radio companies, including Yorkshire Coast Radio. On the Isle of Man Rusling was founder of a public company (Isle of Man International Broadcasting plc) which was licensed to launch a 500,000 Watt international broadcasting station MusicMann279. Rusling chaired forums at the Mix Mag International DJ Convention in London and at several technical forums, e.g. IEEE conference in Washington. He has published several books including training manuals for radio stations and other speciality publications including The Lid Off Laser 558 () and "Who's Who in British Radio" (). Rusling and his wife published a weekly paid-for newspaper in East Yorkshire called the Haltemprice Herald which was the first paid-for weekly to be printed in full colour. In 2006 Paul and Anne Rusling bought the Triton Inn in Brantingham, East Yorkshire. They developed it as a restaurant and ballroom, catering for functions such as weddings and conferences. The Triton was very successful, opening seven days a week for lunch and dinner and serving up to 700 meals a day. The Ruslings sold the business in August 2013 to a local businessman, Bob Carroll. Paul Rusling returned to radio work as a broadcast consultant, advising on new licence applications and radio station operation. He set up a charity to broadcast radio programmes as Free Radio Peace to the Levant region of the Middle East and published "Internet Radio 2016" describing how to launch and operate an online radio station. In September 2016 Paul Rusling authored another book called "Radio Adventures of the MV Communicator", telling the story of eleven radio stations which broadcast from that ship over its 21 years history as a radio ship. The stations included three incarnations of Laser, Holland FM, Veronica Hit Radio, Q The Beat and the Super Station. The book is published by World of Radio and available as a paperback () and in hardback (). In 2017 Rusling published a further book about the programme format and other aspects of the output of the offshore radio stations known as Laser. The book is called 'Laser Radio Programming' () World of Radio. In May 2017 Rusling was presented with a 'Golden Microphone Award' for "outstanding contribution to radio" at a ceremony in The Netherlands. In 2017 he and his wife returned to the licensed trade and took over the management of the Ferns Farm Hotel near Bridlington for the Old Mill Brewery. In Autumn 2019, Ruslings latest book, the Radio Caroline bible, was published. This is a 500 page collection of stories of the life and times of Radio Caroline, from its inception up to today. (). In 2020 Rusling wrote two further books, RADIO FORMATS IN THE UK & US () and in December 2020 a book called DAB & DAB+ the Future of Radio () which examines the development of DAB radio broadcasting and the current expansion of small-scale DAB multiplexes ing. Both titles were published by UK publisher World of Radio.
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