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All the fault of this man ...

 
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Philip Banks
Je Ne Sais Quoi


Joined: 20 Jun 2005
Posts: 11076
Location: Portgordon, Scotland

PostPosted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 9:26 am    Post subject: All the fault of this man ... Reply with quote

Why am I trying to pay the bills as a voice over artist? A combination of things but what planted the seed was seeing a short film on how commercials were made. I would guess this would've been in the very late 1960's or early 1970's. It was a Kodak commercial and the voice over artist also presented a show on BBC Radio 1 every week. He was first and foremost a musician.

For getting me this far, a public thank you from me to the late, great Alexis Korner.

http://www.radiorewind.co.uk/alexis_korner_page.htm

www.thecorporatevoice.com/alexiskorner.mp3
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bobsouer
Frequent Flyer


Joined: 15 Jul 2006
Posts: 9883
Location: Pittsburgh, PA

PostPosted: Sun Jul 30, 2006 8:46 pm    Post subject: Re: All the fault of this man ... Reply with quote

Banksey wrote:

For getting me this far, a public thank you from me to the late, great Alexis Korner.


Banksey. I hope you won't mind if I piggy-back on your message with something I'd planned to post shortly anyway as I've just been thinking about my very first professional voice-over job and what it meant to me.

---story---
The year was 1974. I was deeply in love, and to be blunt, poorer than the proverbial church mouse. I was putting myself through school at a private college in the Chicago suburbs. Every penny I had, and quite a few I was borrowing, were paying for my education, so I had no money for an engagement ring. You see, I wanted to marry Kathy. She wanted to marry me. As I said, I was deeply in love.

She confided in her mother about our sitaution. Mom suggested that a family heirloom diamond was available, one that had belonged to Kathy’s great-grandmother. But, I would have to provide the engagement ring and the wedding band to go with it. One of Kathy’s very best friends was the daughter of a jeweler who had just decided to move his business from Madison, Wisconsin to the Chicago suburbs.

So Kathy and I went through Mr. Johnson’s jewelry inventory, finding just the right setting for the diamond, and a matching wedding band. All for a mere $75, including everything. But, where was I going to get $75?

At the time, Kathy worked for David C. Cook Publishing Company, as an associate curriculm editor. And one afternoon, a few days after our ring shopping expedition, Kathy attended a meeting about an upcoming convention. It was decided that Cook Publishing should prepare a kiosk display that would include pre-recorded announcements about their new releases. But, who could they get to record? There was no budget to hire a professional narrator.

At this point, Kathy spoke up and said that her fiance had a “nice voice” and would be willing to work pretty cheap. Whomever was in charge of this project agreed to this suggestion, asked her to call me. Eventually I found myself at the Domain Communications studio in Wheaton, IL. The agreed upon price was $50 an hour and when we finished recording, the session had taken one and a half hours.

It was an answer to prayer! Exactly the $75 I needed to get Kathy her engagement ring and wedding band. Thus did I get my first paying voice-over job, a very humble start to my life as a professional voice-over artist. How humble? It would be 9 years before I got another paying voice-over job. Thankfully, since then, there've been a few more. (edited to fix grammar error)
---end story---

I'd be very interested to read your story about what turned your heart and mind in the direction of voice-over.
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Be well,
Bob Souer (just think of lemons)
The second nicest guy in voiceover.
+1-724-613-2749
Source Connect, phone patch, pony express


Last edited by bobsouer on Tue Aug 01, 2006 7:42 am; edited 1 time in total
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Bruce
Boardmeister


Joined: 06 Jun 2005
Posts: 7978
Location: Portland, OR

PostPosted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 6:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Alexis Korner certainly had an amazing voice!

My voiceover influence came from people like "Happiness" Harry Scarborough, "Your Little Bitty Soul Buddy" Buddy Scott, "The Pimply-Faced Anemic" Bobby Shannon, and all the disc jockeys at the rival Top 40 stations in town, KRIZ and KRUX. In my high school days I would sneak out of the house late at night not to see girls or go drinking, but to visit the d.j.'s who'd let me sneak in and chat, and who were glad to pontificate in front of "the kid". Man, the things these guys could do behind a microphone! I got on the air shortly after high school, and the rest is history.

My acting influence came in large part from my family. My grandmother played the mother of Rudolph Valentino's character in two of his films (and also acted other films of the silent era). Her stories were wonderful. And there was my mother's cousin Getta. She was in her 50's when I was a teen and did industrial films and TV commercials as a lark. The day she told me about shooting an industrial film at the local drag strip where she played a drag racing granny and did take after take gunning a hot Mustang down the raceway. I was hooked.

Bruce

P.S. Okay, yes, I also snuck out late at night to see girls and drink.
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I'm not a Zoo, but over the years I've played one on radio/TV. .
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audio'connell
T-Shirt


Joined: 02 Feb 2005
Posts: 1971
Location: in a dark studio with a single bulb light...day after day after....

PostPosted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 5:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

For me...two words:

Ernie Anderson

http://www.ernieanderson.com/audio.htm

I had heard his voice on the Carol Burnett Show and on Z100 but I remember specifically standing on a balcony in Singer Island, Florida in 1983 with a radio early in the morning listening to Sonny Fox on Y-100 and that top of the hour ID and the voice that actually made their jingle sound even more exciting (to me anyway).

"DOUBLE U - EHCH - WHY- EYE.....Miami, Ft. Lauderdale and the Palm Beachessss..WHYYYYY-ONNNNE Hundred!"

I've judged every station voice against that which I considered to be the gold standard and I've not heard anyone come close, most especially me.

But we keep on truckin' and maybe someday WE'LL have an impact on some kid listening to the radio....
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- Peter
audioconnell Voice Over Talent
Your friendly, neighborhood voice over talent
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jrodriguez315
A Hundred Dozen


Joined: 26 Sep 2006
Posts: 1202
Location: New Jersey

PostPosted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 2:13 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Last year, I bumped into an old friend from back when I was trying to be a stand-up comic about 15 or so years ago. She currently works for a production company and teaches an improv class in NYC.

I went to her class and she liked me enough to offer me a voiceover job for the 2005 GLAAD awards show. It's the kind of thing Joe Cipriano does live only this was taped. They were doing a segment on Gay Latinos and how they are represented in the media. Well I'd never done any voiceover work before, but she was confident that I would be able to do the job. She originally thought the job was in Spanish but as it turned out, it was to be done in English with a Spanish accent.

I arrived at the studio, she introduced me to the producer, said good luck and left me. When I did the first script, the producer looks at me and says "you don't have an accent". I immediately replied "what kind of accent do you want, Nuyorican, Ricardo Montalban or Speedy Gonzalez? So I did a passable Nuyorican Ricardo Montalban for the job and got paid a nice fee. Probably tiny by the standards of the pros on this board, but it was a nice introduction to the wonderful world of voiceover for me.

Since then I've taken a Cartoon / Character / ADR class with Pamela Lewis (whom I love) and many copy-reading / coaching sessions at an NY studio. I started working for a company in NJ doing ADR work for their Turkish TV shows in English, which I still do whenever they call me. So here I am on about page 25 of 83 in the Archives of this forum looking to go to the next level. I've learned so much here already and I am still not even half-way through!!

Hi-ho, Hi-ho, it's back to the archives I go . . .
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bobsouer
Frequent Flyer


Joined: 15 Jul 2006
Posts: 9883
Location: Pittsburgh, PA

PostPosted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 2:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

jrodriguez315 wrote:
Hi-ho, Hi-ho, it's back to the archives I go . . .

Joe,

I'm not quite finished with the "Gear" archives, but I've completed my reading of the "Chat" archives. I think you'll agree with me, there are several "laugh out loud" moments and "several slap your head, I can't believe I didn't think of that already" moments buried in there. Great stuff.
_________________
Be well,
Bob Souer (just think of lemons)
The second nicest guy in voiceover.
+1-724-613-2749
Source Connect, phone patch, pony express
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steveanthony
Been Here Awhile


Joined: 30 Aug 2006
Posts: 247
Location: Western Massachusetts

PostPosted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 2:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It wasn't a person, but the studio that got me going (and brought me back after a 5 year hiatus). I like playing around in a production studio. The first time I walked into a radio station, it was cool watching the DJs. But when they showed me the production room, that lite the fire . . . that's what hooked me. As for early influences, Bobby Ocean at KFRC was the first guy I really started to pay attention to. And the production/writing/voicing on the "Last Contest," that was something.
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Hart
Assistant Asylum Chief


Joined: 03 Jan 2006
Posts: 2107
Location: Foley, AL

PostPosted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 2:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

steveanthony wrote:
And the production/writing/voicing on the "Last Contest," that was something.


Yes it was.
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Hart Voice Overs Blog
Brian Hart Productions
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billelder
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 12:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

For me it was Gary Guntor and Joel Godard. (Yes, Conan's announcer) I replaced Gary when I was 15 at a local radio station and Joel was a mentor to me. He is the consummate professional and a very decent guy. I never really thought about voiceovers until years later when Joel went to work for NBC. Things he taught me I use today. His professionalism and example has stayed with me through my 30 years in broadcasting, and now.

Steve, The Last Contest was voiced by Jack McCoy wasn't it? What a contest. Those were great years as we made it up as we went along.

Banksey...nice post. Thanks for allowing me to think of those who helped me and believed in me along the way.
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Frank F
Fat, Old, and Sassy


Joined: 10 Nov 2004
Posts: 4421
Location: Park City, Utah

PostPosted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 12:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

For me it was a combination of things that started my career in VO.

I was set to be an Olympic swimmer, had the credentials and near the amount of points necessary to get to the selection committee - then on to the Olympics. Problem was, my parents could not afford the fees that were charged to compete and the hotels and travel expenses, and our local community was of no help... my family was not in the 'clic'. So I thought I could earn enough money to offset the expenses. I had listened to the radio stations on 'skip' and thought that it might be fun to become a disc jockey, Surely, they make big bucks? (Oh, so naive I was at 15 years old).

So, I bothered a couple of DJ's at local stations and one finally helped me learn how to get my First Class License (anyone remember those?). Further he helped me get a job working part, part, part, part time (whenever someone wanted a day off at an automated radio station),

Thus it began, I drove my little Honda 50 motorcycle to and from the statiion via the back roads every day after school and the Program Director, a great guy named Leslie F. Bagley, taught me a lot about doing VO. But, I didn't make the Olympics as I was too busy playing on the radio... LOL and not enough money to make that dream happen.

What I did was start and Advertising Agency with the (now) former P.D. He wrote the spots and I helped with design on print ads and voiced the commercials and narrations. For a kid with braces on his teeth and just in High School this was pretty neat.

The rest is history... and I still have not found out how I can get the sacks and sacks of money delivered to my doorstep. Any clues?

Banksey, thank you for letting me wax poetic and this little trip down nostalgia lane... Don't do it again.

Toodles

Frank F
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Be thankful for the bad things in life. They opened your eyes to the good things you weren't paying attention to before. email: thevoice@usa.com
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tackerman
The Gates of Troy


Joined: 14 Jun 2006
Posts: 1741
Location: in the ether

PostPosted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 1:12 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

--

Last edited by tackerman on Mon Jan 29, 2007 3:07 am; edited 1 time in total
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jrodriguez315
A Hundred Dozen


Joined: 26 Sep 2006
Posts: 1202
Location: New Jersey

PostPosted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 7:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I'm not quite finished with the "Gear" archives, but I've completed my reading of the "Chat" archives. I think you'll agree with me, there are several "laugh out loud" moments and "several slap your head, I can't believe I didn't think of that already" moments buried in there. Great stuff.
There is information in here regarding dealing with clients, VO production, examples of many people submitting their "take" on a particular script, and so much more. It has been quite an education so far and yes, there are lots of those LOL moments in there too

Thank you Bob Souer (Rhymes with Power!)

Joe Rodriguez (Rhymes with nothing in the English language)
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steveanthony
Been Here Awhile


Joined: 30 Aug 2006
Posts: 247
Location: Western Massachusetts

PostPosted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 11:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Steve, The Last Contest was voiced by Jack McCoy wasn't it? What a contest. Those were great years as we made it up as we went along.


Indeed they were. KCBQ, San Diego. I remember the day one of the jocks brought in the tape and we listened to the series (I was working at WHYN in Springfield, MA), astonished not only by the production value, but the prizes . . . like a six pack of Ferrari's.
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