VoiceOver Tip from a Colleague – Cutting down re-takes of your recordings

This time round in my blog, I’m quoting a post which was written a while ago by my colleague Tom Dheere. At the time that I read Tom’s post, I thought that his advice could save a lot of us voiceover peeps a great deal of time, and our clients would benefit as well. So, with Tom’s permission, I’m spreading the word and reprinting his blog. Enjoy!

Retakes usually are needed for a few reasons:

Technical Issues (feedback, low gain, static, etc.)
Background Sounds
Script Errors
Me Being a Doofus (I mispronounced a word, inadvertently changed a word, inserted a word, flubbed an accent, or stressed the wrong word)

These are all common errors, many of which you can minimize.

TIP OF THE WEEK: Here’s what you can do to minimize the amount of retakes needed:

Read the script. I know that sounds obvious, but I mean REALLY read the script. I try read it three times before I record. Once to enjoy it & understand the story, once to break down the characters, and once to review spelling and grammar.

Ask questions. If I’m not sure about something, I ask the publisher. If he’s not sure, he contacts the author and gets back to me. Once in a while you may get to talk to the author directly, but I’m not always sure that’s best. Writing something and reading it aloud are two different disciplines and it’s the publisher’s job to bridge them.

Take notes. I always build a pronunciation guide. Sci-fi stories tend to have a lot a big real words and even more fake words, some of which don’t feel organic. Get the correct pronunciations and practice them. Also, I like using accents so I track how each character speaks and make sure I get the subtleties right.

Have fun! If you do your homework and enjoy the session, your acting will shine through.

Photobucket

Thanks Tom!

Cheers!

Add to Technorati Favorites

Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook

Follow stefsvoice on Twitter


Digg!

VoiceOver Bits – Positive Thinking – Happy Fourth of July

Happy Fourth of July to all my friends and colleagues in the US. It’s not a holiday week-end over here in England, but still there are lots of festivals going on and the weather’s great.

Photobucket

Rodney Saulsberry’s got a new YouTube video out – Practice Fast Commercial Tags With Rodney Saulsberry – I’m looking forward to adding that to my repetoire of pre audition/gig warmups. Here’s the URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umXojMruUSg&feature=youtu.be

Photobucket

Penny Abshire of the Voice Acting Academy wrote a really powerful list of 7 Ways to Maintain a Positive (and grateful) Attitude. It’s brilliant. With Penny’s permission, I’m reprinting it here. You can find their URL on the right hand side of my page.

7 Ways to Maintain a Positive (and grateful) Attitude

1. Keep a “Happy File.” Keep a file or box full of special things – birthday cards, an encouraging note, an award you’ve won, a love letter, a special picture, etc. When you are feeling low, take a few moments to look through the file. As you do, allow yourself to feel the same emotion of pride, love or excitement you did when you received that letter, award or card.

2. Train yourself to “turn it around!” When a negative thought enters your mind, find that one extremely positive thought you keep in reserve (your touchstone), see it clearly, feel it, and then push out the negative thought! Positive and negative thoughts can’t co-exist in the mind and positive thoughts are much stronger!

3. Keep a Gratitude Journal. Take a moment each day to write down something you are grateful for in your life. It doesn’t have to be a big thing. (For instance, I am VERY grateful for the hot water I receive at a twist of a knob each morning when I take my shower.)

4. Develop the habit of daily prayer. Like any other parent, our Father in Heaven wants to hear from us. He wants to hear how we are feeling, He wants to hear about our trials, He wants to enjoy our successes and most of all, He wants to help us. So, when life gets dark and dreary, don’t forget to pray!

5. Remove negative self-talk from your vocabulary: “What a dumb thing to do!…..How could I be so stupid?……I’m an idiot!…..I am so fat!” You see, your subconscious doesn’t know the difference between fact and fiction. Keep telling it you’re incapable, stupid and fat and guess what you’ll be?

6. Develop the habit of consciously thinking about how you’d want tomorrow to be. Play it out in your mind before you fall asleep – see it like a movie. If you write a positive, happy “script” you’re more likely to have a good tomorrow! (For instance, “I wake refreshed and feeling confident. I enjoy a wonderful hot shower and then a delicious breakfast. I look forward to starting my day,” etc.)

7. Count Your Blessings! Whenever you start “feeling sorry for yourself,” get out that Gratitude Journal or your Happy File (or make the list in your head) and start concentrating on all the incredible blessings you have in your life – from the largest to the smallest. Pretty soon, you will be feeling so much gratitude that you will forget why you were feeling down.

Photobucket

New Arts and Jewellry Facebook Page

One of my colleagues suggested I start a separate FB page for my jewellry and crafty bits (my FBook account is for my voiceover business). So, taking his excellent and respected advice, I started a FBook arts and jewellry page a couple of days ago.

It’s a bit lonely over there with a few likes. If you don’t mind, can you visit my page and – if you feel so inspired – “like” it ? Thanks so much!

https://www.facebook.com/pages/BeadedDelightsByStef/201721309873775

Cheers all!

Add to Technorati Favorites

Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook

Follow stefsvoice on Twitter


Digg!

The Splashes of Life

This lovely story was in my email from a website called Inspiration Line ( http://www.inspirationline.com ). I just wanted to share this with my friends and colleagues here on my blog! It seems to me that this philosophy is a good one to embrace in general life, or even in a short-term situation such as recording in a studio or working with others in a different capacity.

A Sioux Indian story…

My grandfather took me to the fishing pond
when I was about seven, and he told me
to throw a stone into the water.

He told me to watch the circles created by the stone.
Then he asked me to think of myself as that stone person.

“You may create lots of splashes in your life,
but the waves that come from those splashes will disturb the peace
of all your fellow creatures,” he said.

“Remember that you are responsible for what you put in your circle
and that circle will also touch many other circles.”

“You will need to live in a way that allows the good that comes
from your circle to send the peace of that goodness to others.”

“The splash that comes from anger or jealousy will send
those feelings to other circles. You are responsible for both.”

That was the first time I realized each person creates the
inner peace or discord that flows out into the world.

We cannot create world peace if we are riddled with
inner conflict, hatred, doubt, or anger.

We radiate the feelings and thoughts that we hold inside,
whether we speak them or not.

Whatever is splashing around inside of us
is spilling out into the world, creating beauty or discord
with all other circles of life.

Remember the eternal wisdom:

WHATEVER YOU FOCUS ON EXPANDS…

~Author Unknown
Add to Technorati Favorites

Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook

Follow stefsvoice on Twitter


Digg!

Ciao from Italy!

I’m not really still in Italy…but I was just there a few days ago!

Ciao from Italy
Abano Terme, Montegrotto, Padova

 

 


Arrived in Venice after circling in the air for about an hour waiting for the thunderstorm to pass.

Sitting at the hotel admiring the globe lights illuminating the darkness and drinking the very unItalian Earl Gray tea – with lemon – meditating on the sculptured perfection of the Hotel Venezia’s (Abano Terme) front lawn accented with colourful small flowers in little quartered circles…Yes, we’re definitely back in Italy.

The next day was fabbo, bright and sunny. A wonderful surprise since the BBC weather predicted rain for the whole week-end.

What to do with myself whilst Hubby was working? The kind concierge looked up the weather on the internet, and we saw sunny and cloudy today – high possibility of rain tomorrow. Ok, it’s a no-brainer! Montegrotto & The Butterfly House today, and Padova with my favourite pizza place and lots of shops, cafes to nip into should it start to pour – tomorrow.

The butterfly house, officially called the Butterfly Arc, is totally WOW! I have never seen anything like it. It’s really hot and humid for the sake of the butterflies, but SO well worth a small bit of discomfort. Can’t even describe the wide variety of butterflies found there..So, piccie time!

This butterfly is this beauiful blue colour on the inside..AND...

Brown on the outside!

Amazing floral life there as well…

Chameleon and dragon lizards, and tortoises too…

…and more butterflies

Spent a not unconsiderable period of time trying to catch a snap of a butterfly in flight! Ha! Got it!

and there were…wait for it….bunnies…

…Then there was the Fairy Wood on the grounds of the Butterfly House…

The Fairy queen

and her mate and myself [fresh from the humid butterfly rooms]!

Wow again. Magic! You can even sit on the fairy queen’s throne and imagine yourself queen (or king) of the fairies.

There were many school groups at the centre that day enjoying a chance to be queen or king; so, as soon as the children were gone, I quickly nipped over to the throne and had a sit down myself! That was so cool!

 

Photobucket

There was also a big Slow Cooking fest on in Abano Terme, but unfortunately, it was strictly for the trade – not regular peeps. Boo hoo! Comforted myself with a nice cappu at one of my favourite little cafes in Abano Terme – Peccati di Gola. I think a lot of local peeps go there, so it’s got to be good!

Photobucket

Padova rocks! I really like the city (and university town) and believe it’s well worth a visit. But since I’ve spent this blog rabbiting on about the Butterfly Arc, I’ll save Padova for another day to cover it properly!

Photobucket
As we have frequent chances to go to Italy. I’m thinking it would be brilliant to have some VoiceOver representation there. I’m open to suggestions!

Photobucket

App of the Week
Hot Body Yoga

Keeping with the last blog’s Yoga theme…I found another iPod app with Yoga exercises using weights. There are many routines in this app for various goals, such as recovering from injuries, stretch, strengthen, etc.

One of the intermediate routines uses dumbbells. I’ll have to work my way up to that one, but I’m looking forward to it. The programme is aimed at women, but I think women or men could try it.

Voiceover News

Continuing with announcements for radio stations…just did a Mexican character for an animation vid…and auditioning like mad!

Cheers…

Add to Technorati Favorites

Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook

Follow stefsvoice on Twitter


Digg!

London Chocolate Festival – a photo essay

All photos copyright 2010 stefania lintonbon

“There are four basic food groups: milk chocolate, dark chocolate, white chocolate, and chocolate truffles.” Anonymous

 

Had a sweet time the other week-end at the London 2010 Chocolate Festival. This was my first time to attend such a festival, and I have to say it was a delicious experience! Even if it did rain — a lot — near the end of the day. I was determined not to let it slow me down — and so were the other attendees!

There were no choccie microphones on offer for voiceover type peeps; but I daresay someone would have been only too willing to whip one up for me.

Here are some piccies from the day:

Chocolate IS good for you. This lady says so!

Ok, time for a drool fest! Here we go!

The three piccies above are all chocolate sculptures!

For shoe lovers…

 

It rained, but since when have a few drops of water stopped a dedicated chocolate lover! ha, ha!

And there’s more…

Photobucket

iPod App of the Week

This week, I’ve gone mad for WordChasers. It is so much fun — if you’re into words, Scrabble-like games, etc. The letters rain down — slowly at first — and then faster and faster — whilst you try to select the appropriate ones to make words for maximum points. It’s an absolutely beautiful game as well, lovely bright jelly colours. And I like how the popcorn pops up and down at the end when you’re viewing your stats! :)

All for now…
Cheers

Add to Technorati Favorites
Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook



Digg!

The Art of Conversation

Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, UK --very early morning shot, just me and the birds about!

The most amazing thing happened today. In this age of blogging, social networking, forums, texting, instant messaging…I had an actual conversation with a stranger in a cafe. It was most pleasant.

Usually we sit in our own little world with iPods, netbooks doing our business. I was having my coffee lost in iPodTouch land, enjoying my games. then this older man with a lovely friendly face and cherry cheeks, asked me what I was doing. I explained to him that I was playing a game trying to match all the flowers. He then started telling me that there were so many types of games nowadays, and that he could barely operate a mobile phone.

I went back to my game, but he carried on talking  in such a friendly fashion that I finally switched off the iPod for a listen. We talked about his family and his mother’s life in America & England.

Sometimes life’s little encounters can bring a really sweet spot to our days and remind us of the good old fashioned art of face to face conversation just for the sake of it. Nice!

Photobucket

Continuing my recommendations for cool iPod Touch/phone apps — this week’s app is the Flowerz game. It’s so much fun. You have to match up 3 or more flowering lily pads. But you have to use strategy, because they have to be matched in two ways. It’s a very pretty girly game with pond water sound effects, etc. But you don’t have to be a girl to play and like it.

It’s also a little bit addictive! :D Highly recommended for passing time!

Cheers!

Add to Technorati Favorites

Bookmark this on Delicious

Share this on Facebook


Digg!

Success Habits Roundup!

 

Venice Veg-Fruit Market

I came across a great article by Barbara Winter that’s loaded with useful, inspiring tips. As a voiceover artist, I consider myself a bit of an entrepreneur in my ongoing quest to find & open myself to opportunities where I can be useful and of service with my voice, for financial compensation.

Actually, anyone — in any field — can find gems in this article.

Photobucket

FOUR SUCCESS HABITS OF JOYFULLY JOBLESS ACTIVISTS

“There was an audible gasp in the Prosperous Author workshop when speaker Jerry Gillies told the audience, “Buy one hardcover book every week. Support the industry you want to be part of.”

Seems to me that the skeptics missed the point. What Gillies suggested was quite elementary: go beyond lip service and actively support something that matters. If you’re an author, don’t you want to see a lively publishing industry? If you’re a self-employed person of a different sort, it makes sense to support others who have taken this alternative route.

When enough people get involved, it can turn into a movement. Consider the growing number of folks who think of themselves as locavores. This interest in building self-reliant food economies by consuming things that are locally grown keeps spreading because individuals took up the cause.

What are the success habits of entrepreneurial activists? Here’s my short list.

Instigate. The late singer John Denver once confessed, “I was always waiting around for somebody to do something about the world. Then I realized nobody is coming to save me. It starts with me, where I am.”

Activists don’t wait around for opportunity to show up on their doorstep. They look for what’s missing and get busy filling the gap.

Adopt a protégé, organize a meet-up, share what you’ve learned about social media with a local group of businessowners. Keep asking yourself my favorite question, “How can I make it better?” and then follow the answers that you get.

Circulate. Your entrepreneurial success will expand more rapidly and easily if you actively support other joyfully jobless folks. Sometimes that means spending more to purchase a book from your independent bookseller or a tool from the neighborhood hardware store.

I like the perspective on this from Veronique Vienne. She writes, “The goods we get in exchange for what we pay are only a small portion of the full value of a transaction. A chance to put money back into the economy and give it to deserving people or causes is in fact an important part of the equation….Can you remember how you felt the last time you bought overpriced lemonade and cookies from a seven-year-old sidewalk vendor? Or how proud you were when you got a painting directly from an unknown artist and paid fair market value for it? Or how good it felt to buy a favorite niece a quaint dollhouse made of wood by a local craftsman instead of a plastic one with a clock tower and three-door garage?”

Collaborate. Business partnerships have a success rate lower than marriage, which doesn’t bode well for permanent relationships. If Lennon and McCartney couldn’t make it work, we need to rethink that model. (And if you have a fabulous business partnership, bless you.)

Collaboration, on the other hand, can be a terrific alternative that generates fresh thinking, new ideas and synergy. It reminds me of the first trip my daughter took to Europe when she was in college. Although the adventure was originally supposed to include several friends, the others dropped out so Jennie set off by herself. However, she met solo travelers along the way and would sometimes spend a few days on the road with her new companions. Then they’d go their separate ways.

This works just as well in business.

Celebrate. Yesterday my granddaughter went off to kindergarten dressed as a cheerleader. What  was the occasion? Happily,  Zoe has a teacher who loves to catch his students doing something right. When that happens, he adds marbles to a big jar. Once the jar is full, the class gets a special treat. The first time around it was Pajama Day and everyone arrived in their night clothes. This time is was Costume Day.
 
When you’re self-employed, sometimes the victories are known only to you. That doesn’t make them any less important. Find ways to celebrate even small advancements. Fill up your own marble jar.”

Photobucket

My ipodTouch app of the week:

My Thoughts+

This is just fantastic if you’re into positive thinking and affirmations. It comes with over 1,000 affirmations covering various areas of life; and we have the option to add our own affirmations. so, naturally many of my custom ones centre around voiceover life and career goals.

It’s just brilliant for keeping one on a positive path in a pleasant, inspiring way. You can play the music that comes built in the app, or play your own.

Cheers for now all…


Add to Technorati Favorites
Bookmark this on Delicious

What’s Your Story?

 

Today I’d like to introduce you to one of my colleagues from Ecademy, Bernadette Doyles. Bernadette posted a very insightful and educational blog giving tips that we can all use in some form or other. Here’s the blog, reprinted with Bernadette’s permission!

Five Tips for Telling Your Story

The hopes and dreams, ups and downs you’ve experienced since starting your business would probably make a terrific story. In fact, it should make a terrific story, one you tell the world as part of your unique appeal. The story of how and why you’ve built your business can be a powerful addition to your marketing presence.There’s a way to tell your story that will engage potential and current clients. It will make doing business with you more attractive. Nothing makes us more interesting than the story of who we are.

Here are five tips for telling your company’s story effectively:

1. Imagine Your Story as a Movie: If you were writing the screenplay for the story of your company, what would you write? Let your story unfold, from the first day you realized you wanted to be in business and everything after that. There are a few very basic themes about which all movies are made: the Cinderella story, the hero or heroine saving the day, and so forth. Which theme does your story take?

2. What Was Your Motivation? Something you should definitely share is your motivation for starting your business. Did you look around and see a need no one else was filling? Were others in your field only offering part of the picture? Was there some big turning point in your life that prompted you strike out on your own? Whatever it was, revealing how it all started is an important part of your story.

3. Who Are Your Heroes? Who inspires you? A superhero? A character in a book or movie? Imagining someone heroic for inspiration can add real strength to your story.

4. What Have You Learned? Colonel Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame learned the value of perseverance as he struggled to sell his fried chicken recipe. What lessons can you share that might inspire others?

5. Tell the Truth: Honestly revealing your struggles as you built your business makes you appear more vulnerable and approachable. Many successful people have shared stories of hitting low points on the way up. Even if your company’s growth wasn’t in a straight line, sharing how you’ve regrouped and adapted can make a compelling story.

Knowing who you are and why you’re in business makes doing business with you more attractive. Begin to develop your own company’s story to share with others. Tell the truth in a compelling and interesting way that will cause others to appreciate who you are. Make your story a metaphor for your business, something that makes you unique.

Once you’ve crafted a story to tell, begin to use it in your marketing. Deepen your connection with clients by giving them insight into your company. Share your story with prospective clients to help develop trust.

There’s one more bonus to chronicling your journey in business. Once you clarify for yourself your path as an entrepreneur, you’ll begin to attract the business that will create the next chapter in your story.

Photobucket

My lovely colleague voice artist DB Cooper, recently told us about a video that she has on her YouTube channel. It’s a very interesting interview with DB sharing her extensive voiceover experience with voiceover and the gaming world. You can find it here: DB Cooper speaking on voiceover in the gaming field and voiceover in general.

Cheers…
Add to Technorati Favorites
Bookmark this on Delicious

Happy Holidays from Stefsvoice

 

 

Wishing everyone the most blessed, happy, prosperous Christmas and Holiday period ever!

Christmas tree chez Lintonbon!

 

Illuminata – Tokyo

 

Illuminata – Tokyo

AbanoTerme, Italy

 

AbanoTerme, Italy

Here’s my little Crimbo pressie for all my cyber friends!

Voiceover as Linus – a Christmas message to you from me!<

Ok, back to work for me. Have finished recording voiceover for a 200+ page e-learning audiobook. Editing still to be done! Mulled wine tea to be drunk. Lots to do!

Safe happy hols all!

Cheers…

Stefania

Add to Technorati Favorites
Bookmark this on Delicious

My voiceover world from A-Z


Cappucino in Padova, Italy!

I put on my thinking cap recently, wondering what is my personal A-Z guideline to life as a professional Voice Artist.

One idea led to another, till I found I’d run the gamut from A-Z, or as they sometimes say in the States…from Soup to Nuts (appetiser to dessert!). Here’s my list! These were originally done as Tweets, hence their brevity.

A
Attitude is positive. Can’t win all auditions, but can get the ones that are mine & right for me!

B
Budget–a top priority– a meeting of what client can pay/what we require!

C
Counsel! Help is only an internet contact away. Develop a group of friends and help each other out!

D
Diligence. Do my best, every gig!

E
Expenses – Keep an eye on what “pay to play”/mktg efforts are worth paying for & when to give it a miss

F
Friends – Get to know many peeps in many different fields of life. Develop contacts.

G
Give of yourself to others, give the client what they want.

H
Happy – think of happy VO victories when your feeling down, it’ll bring you more good things!

I
Imitate the different voices that we hear every day [not within their hearing tho]

J
Joy- put a lot of joy & energy into pursuing your VO career

K
Know the biz, listen to podcasts, study,read

L
Love the process – even when it’s frustrating

M
Money – let’s make lots of it!

N
Nuture yourself – cultivate some non-VO interests & friends, broaden yourself

O
Open myself to more prosperity by developing additional skills

P
Practice everyday reading something out loud, or recording, or auditioning

Q
Quality clients, – in a pinch go for quantity – just keep moving upwards

R
Rest – take time to chill and ‘smell the flowers’

S
Sympathy – have sympathy for that poor old client who really doesn’t know what he/she wants

T
Triumphant – you can do it!

U
Uggh! :( If the gig really isn’t you, don’t bother auditioning.

V
Vanity – A little is really good. Keeps you going , when the gigs are slow coming forth

W
Worthy – There are so many esteemed VO peeps who are willing to share with us- worth listening to & learning tips & shortcuts from them

X
X-files – maybe where all those pay to play auddies go where no one has been chosen after 4,5,6 months

Y
Year – Try to show a better result, somehow, at every year’s inventory

Z
Zip pah doo da! I know this makes no sense. But neither does VO sometimes. But it’s still fun!

That’s all for this post….

Cheers!

Add to Technorati Favorites
Bookmark this on Delicious

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,815 other followers