![]() His best friend was dating a DJ from Y95 radio in Dallas, and when the two returned home for Christmas break, the girl planted the seed. His family had moved from Los Angeles to Dallas, and Ferris eventually chose to attend the University of Oklahoma. Like many other kids graduating high school, Ferris had no idea what he wanted to do. Then she said, ‘I see your son doing something in the public eye, a celebrity of sorts, either in media or politics.’ I think that stuck with me.” She knew I was a Scorpio and that I was creative – eerie little things like that. She said, ‘Excuse me ma’am, but I’m a psychic and I’m getting some strong readings from your son,’” Ferris said. “She finally got up and walked over to us. ![]() The only other person in the room, the old woman was watching him. When Ferris was a child living in Los Angeles, he and his mother were in the waiting room of a car dealership when the old lady changed his life. There are no rules on the web, no commercials.”Īnd The Spy, which has haunted in and out of Oklahoma City airwaves for years, is here to stay. “We get 8,000 to 10,000 listeners, from the fanatics to the casual. “We moved into our current building two years ago, and once we figured out that the web Spy was the plan, the city rallied behind us,” Ferris said. Starting late 2012, KOSU’s schedule began featuring the original shows and wide array of independent music to its listeners. Just when corporate radio pushed the Spy into the Internet – which ended up being a blessing for the station – KOSU, the NPR station serving Oklahoma City, Tulsa and Stillwater, entered into a content partnership with The Spy. Each time, like some music shaman, Ferris has managed to bring it from the brink and back into the light. Over and over, The Spy radio, with its signature peering and slightly sinister eyes, has faced demise. And there’s nothing worse than dead air, especially for a guy who has single-handedly reincarnated Oklahoma’s alternative rock show over and over and over from the dead.įerris has managed to escape the word dead more times than Rasputin. He needs to make sure one of the programs gets finished or he’ll have dead air. It’s the anniversary of The Spy radio station’s special programming, the VDub Sessions, and there’s a party in the city.īut Ferris has to get back to his radio station. ![]() It can show employees their performance and can create some friendly competitive environment in the organization.Ferris O’Brien: The Spy teams up with KOSU and reigns supreme againįerris O’Brien is brimming with nervous energy as he stands next to the lime green old VW van at Oklahoma City’s Plaza District. Can be displayed either on Realtime bases on a LED display indicator or at end of shift on work area display boards. Kosu can be used through visual management in work area for best results a Cell (Cellular Manufacturing) or Production Line. The total overall productivity of the entire factory can also be measured. (Number of People X Hours Worked) / Number of blue balls made How to calculate overall productivity of entire factory?.How to calculate Kosu for blue balls production area?.Shift hours is considered as standard 8 hours. In factory there are two manufacturing area, 25 Peoples are assigned to produce red balls in their area and 30 peoples are assigned to produce blue balls in their area. Top management can monitor and improve KOSU of different areas in manufacturing.Īssume, A ball manufacturing factory, producing red and blue balls 100 balls each per shift.It can be used as a performance indicator for cost reduction initiative.Big advantage of Kosu, term Productivity is clear to everyone and can see as direct labor cost of products.All the direct costs (in terms of time spent) and additional hours are considered.KOSU is the unit of time spent for each product.Kosu is a means to learn about the real value / real cost of products in real time.It's a productivity indicator obtained by dividing the total worked time by the number of pieces produced or in simple terms time taken it takes to produce one unit of a product, or to complete a process. Kosu is a unit of productivity measurement.
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