A script is called a document or text in which all the details about the making of a television program, movie or theatrical work are indicated, in addition to the content that it entails. The radio script, for its part, is one designed especially for radio spaces, so that both the announcers and the guests (if any), are attentive to the sequence of comments they must make and what topic it is about certain moments. This, according to the elements that configure it, can also serve as an indicator to the public about the nature of the program, in addition to including certain resources to account for the station that is tuned in.
Radio scripts have a particular structure, according to the environment in which they are developed. This is made up of the tuning, a space in which, by means of small songs, the listener is indicated which station they have tuned in; the mask, for its part, is a kind of tune, but much more elaborate, with fixed credits; the callsigns are short announcements, without musical background, that inform the listener about the station they are listening to or the program in question; the lead is the mention, given by the announcer, of what will come next; Sections are the divisions in which the program differs; the sketchesAre those dramatizations with humorous purposes, which are given to enrich the content of the program; the spots are the musical shorts of no more than 30 seconds used to advertise products or companies; in addition, there are the blows, sound effects that intensify announced phrases.