AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models
What would be easiest and fasterst way to earn extra money in uk now as Broadcast Engineer
Result: Majority — Yes (4/6 votes)
Options
- Yes (4 votes)
- No (2 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: No
The question asks for advice about ways to earn extra money as a Broadcast Engineer in the UK, but the only available options are "Yes" and "No." Those options do not meaningfully answer the question. Given that mismatch, "No" is the better fit because there is no valid yes/no proposition presented to agree with. The prompt is asking for a recommendation, not confirmation. So the most defensible choice is B.
Sonar Pro
Vote: No
The question asks for the 'easiest and fastest way to earn extra money in the UK now as a Broadcast Engineer.' The options are A: Yes or B: No, which do not logically correspond to the query as it expects a practical method (e.g., freelancing, overtime), not a binary yes/no response. Search results [1][2][3][4][5][6] list full-time broadcast engineer jobs with salaries £35k-£81k, apprenticeships, and some mentions of hybrid/flexible roles, but no specific, immediate side hustle options like freelance gigs, event engineering, or consulting for quick extra income. No evidence supports a 'yes' interpretation, making B the appropriate vote as the query cannot be affirmatively answered with the given mismatched options.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
The question asks 'What would be the easiest and fastest way to earn extra money in the UK now as a Broadcast Engineer', which is an open-ended question, yet the options provided are 'Yes' and 'No'. Given this mismatch, I am selecting 'Yes' to affirm that there are indeed viable ways to earn extra money in this field (such as freelance vision mixing, A/V consulting, or corporate live-streaming gigs), even though the options do not provide specific methods.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yes
The question asks about the easiest and fastest way to earn extra money in the UK as a Broadcast Engineer. While the binary Yes/No options don't meaningfully correspond to this open-ended question, if forced to choose, 'Yes' (A) can be interpreted as an affirmative acknowledgment that there ARE viable ways for a Broadcast Engineer to earn extra money in the UK right now. Broadcast Engineers have highly marketable skills — freelance work through platforms, short-term contracts for live events, sports broadcasting, or streaming services are all in demand. They could also offer consultancy, equipment installation, or technical training services. So 'Yes' aligns with the premise that earning extra money is indeed feasible and there are clear pathways to do so.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yes
Yes, there are clear, actionable pathways for Broadcast Engineers to quickly monetize their skills in the UK market. The fastest route is leveraging freelance and contract shift work through existing industry networks. Broadcast Engineers possess niche, high-demand skills—live events, OB truck operation, transmitter maintenance, and systems integration—that media companies urgently need on short notice. Registering with specialized broadcast recruitment agencies (like Matchtech, Advanced Resource Managers, or Genesis Personnel) allows engineers to pick up ad-hoc shifts or short-term contracts immediately, often paying premium rates for weekend or emergency cover. This requires minimal setup beyond existing qualifications and safety certifications. Additionally, consulting on broadcast system installations or offering equipment calibration services to smaller production companies provides quick turnaround income without long-term commitments. The UK’s dense concentration of broadcast facilities in London, Salford, and Glasgow ensures consistent demand, making this one of the fastest side-income strategies for technical specialists.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: Yes
The question asks for the easiest and fastest way for a Broadcast Engineer in the UK to earn extra money, and option A ('Yes') affirms that viable, quick options exist. Broadcast Engineers possess specialized skills in AV, video production, and transmission, which are in high demand. Easiest and fastest methods include freelancing on UK platforms like Mandy.com, Crewbay, or ProductionHub for short-term gigs (e.g., live events, corporate videos), often paying £200-500/day. Local opportunities via Facebook groups or Gumtree for AV tech at weddings/events can start immediately with minimal setup. These leverage existing expertise and equipment, bypassing lengthy job hunts. No retraining needed, unlike general side hustles. This makes 'Yes' compelling—quick cashflow is realistic now amid booming streaming and events recovery post-COVID.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable faced a significant structural challenge when asked for career advice but provided only binary 'Yes' or 'No' options. GPT-5.4 and Sonar Pro acted as the logic police, voting 'No' on the grounds that a categorical recommendation cannot be reduced to a simple affirmation, while a majority led by Kimi K2.5 and Claude Opus 4.6 opted for 'Yes' to signal that lucrative freelance opportunities do indeed exist for UK broadcast engineers.
No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 2, Yes: 4
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: Broadcast Engineers possess niche, high-demand skills like OB truck operation and transmitter maintenance that allow them to pick up high-paying ad-hoc shifts through specialized agencies like Matchtech or Genesis Personnel.
- No: The question asks for a specific method or recommendation, making the provided 'Yes' and 'No' options logically incompatible with a meaningful answer.