Interview with Audiobook & Character actor extraordinaire... Ray Porter!

Two bearded, long haired dudes sit down to talk about the world of voice acting and character reading!

Ray Porter is an audiobook veteran with hundreds of books to his name on Audible and across the audiobook world. Hear how Ray found a career out of bringing stories to life, and the tools he uses to give life and depth to characters.

Here's what they talk about:

Timecodes: 0:00:00 - Intro
0:02:15 - setting up a studio, does it need to be expensive? PVC pipe blanket fort
0:05:05 - Are mics important?
0:07:00 - The best way to start out in voiceover / audiobooks
0:08:45 - will your mic prevent you from getting certain voice work?
0:14:35 - Modding a 416 into an actual shotgun
0:15:55 - Do you and Simon Vance and Scott Brick get together for audiobook parties in LA?
0:17:00 - Why it’s important to stay diverse in your interests
0:18:35 - How did this all start, tell me your life story!
0:26:00 - How did you get cast as Darkseid in Justice League?
0:30:45 - Why audiobooks are better than real books (especially Shakespeare)
0:34:10 - What is your process for preparing for an audiobook?
0:38:01 - What are your relationships with your authors like?
0:40:04 - Tell me about your experience of recording ‘The Sandman’ series with Dirk Maggs
0:44:32 - Tell me about recording the ‘Project Hail Mary’ audiobook
0:47:50 - How to differentiate characters within a story? Tell me your approach for ‘We are Legion – We are Bob’
0:53:09 - How important is life experience in acting & narration work?
0:56:05 - The challenge of narration female voices
0:58:10 - Why Ray hates adverbs!
0:59:30 - What techniques can you use to modify your voice for different characters?
1:02:00 - The recent inclusivity discussion has brought up some interesting changes for actors. How do you feel about how what’s acceptable for actors to play has changed?
1:09:48 - Accents – do you like them, do you study them?
1:17:45 - What’s your advice for aspiring actors to do the work and get the work?

Thank you to Ray Porter who was so generous with his time and information.

Transcript:

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to vo live brought to you by gravy for the brain Oceania. We have a video podcast that talks to people who are big and voiceover the movers and shakers, the interesting people of the voice world. And my goodness, today's guest is very interesting. Indeed. He has his. He's an extraordinary the world of audio books. And he has also touched so many hearts and minds, including my own. It's Ray Porter. Hello. Hello. I'm

Ray Porter

sorry for touching your heart and mind. Yes, that

Toby Ricketts

was without permission as well. Yes, exactly.

Ray Porter

Well, the nice thing is you don't have to show everybody on the doll where I touched you. You said hearts and minds. So that's you know, exactly,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, it was very, very clear about that. Anyway, so how are you today? How are things?

Ray Porter

Well, thank you. I'm sweltering, a little bit. It's Los Angeles. So in my sort of janky home, slapped together blanket for booth. I I'm a little sweaty, but it's how it goes to the world of voiceover. I tend to work a lot at night, actually. Because Los Angeles. I don't know whether you knew this or not Los Angeles can be a kind of a loud place. Really? It's a noisy city. I know. Weird, right. So I tend to record a lot at night. Because of that. It just the general noise of the day is a little bit calmer. And it's cooler.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, absolutely. Like the whole northern hemisphere is feeling a little bit a little bit Sisley at the moment. Well, yes.

Ray Porter

And the West Coast is, you know, doing its yearly being on fire things. So it's just you know, it's just one of those things.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. The burn off. Happens every year off. Yeah. No,

Ray Porter

not that much can accumulate in a year. Can we stop just burning every year? Would that be possible at all?

Toby Ricketts

It would be nice. Yeah. It's nice to talk to a another voiceover professional, who has a beard and long hair as well.

Ray Porter

Rather, exactly. Yeah. Well, you know, it's like so many, so many of our colleagues actually pretend like they're gonna go out and interact with people. I just don't get that.

Toby Ricketts

Luckily, I mean, I live four hours from the nearest city. So like, at least I'm quite away from the humans. Yeah. So that's kind of nice. Yeah, yeah. But you, you instead just built a sort of a werewolf trench somewhere in your house with blue light? I

Ray Porter

have. Yes, yeah. So I have my apartment in Pasadena. And I went to Home Depot and cut up a bunch of PVC pipe and got some moving blankets and got some thicker, you know, acoustic kind of blankets and sort of hung the entire thing off. So it literally is a blanket for it.

Toby Ricketts

I feel like it's a very inspiring story, because so many people enter this game with the PVC blanket forward. And and think that they're kind of like, oh, you know, one day, I'll get a new studio. But I think you're living proof that you actually don't need to if you do

Ray Porter

it well, you know, the funniest thing when I started out, obviously, you know, because I had a background in radio, and then I went off and did theater forever and ever, and then started doing audiobooks. And of course, you get gear acquisition syndrome, you know, you you, you know, you're somebody who's got the authoritative, you need this microphone, and you need this blurry blur, and this preamp has to happen. And you've and pretty soon, you're making this enormous outlay of cash and you've not gotten a job yet. And I see so many people end up either impoverished or mystified or both, without ever having gotten on to it. And so I've recently more out of necessity than anything else, I've focused more on how little do I need to get this job done? And I don't know just simplify, because at the end of the day, if what's going into the microphone, sucks. The mic is not a magic wand, you know? So it's, you know, it's about how do I how do I do the most with what I have. So if you're sitting in a closet, and you change the acoustic characteristics by moving a sweater, I've done it, did it on a number of books. Or if you have a proper booth, which I did, or you you know, have this situation, it's about adaptability more than anything else. And finding the right tools. Let people have a lot of advice on Oh, this is the microphone you have to have. This is the industry standard. Well, the industry standard may not be your standard. Like I see that, you know you're talking through a u 87. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

I am. Yes. This is my guest myself when I hit a particularly good year and I thought I put your microphone. Yeah. Actually funny that and I talked about this to George Witham and my last thing, but have you seen the replicas? This one he's made? Yeah. But the guy New York and they sound exactly the same. And they're $150. Yes, yes.

Ray Porter

This is what I mean. That's the other thing is and as a guitar player, too. You know, I remember back in the 90s there were certain brands of guitars, you're like No, no, and I played some recently it was like, oh, oh, I see. They did their homework. The same It's true. You don't have to lay out a massive amount of money. The reason why I point out the 87 is when I started, I was going to studios and everybody had them. They don't sound good on me. They make me sound like I have adenoids twice as big as my head. I just sound terrible. Yeah, so I went looking for a mic, which is not easy or fun. You know, it's, it's, it's like trying on shoes from people who don't necessarily want you to try them on. It can be very, very trying to to, you know, test out a bunch of mics. But I did a lot of homework I did a lot of reading happens to be in LA. And I had heard about this guy, Dave Perlman, who makes the Perlman TM one microphone, so I called him up. And I mean, I didn't know this guy is highly regarded for making his two mics, which are based on you 47 architecture, but they're hand built. And, you know, I thought I would go through like three tiers of secretaries or something. He answered the phone, and he was like, you're in LA. And I said, Yeah, he goes, wants to come to my house. Okay. So I went to his house, and I looked at his mics and stuff. And then he hooked one up, and I grabbed a book and I read something. And I took it back to the people I was working with at the time, and the engineer listened to it and his eyes got huge. And he's like, that's your microphone. Now, we got to find, you know, the right preamp to pair with it. So I ended up going with the great river me one and V. Which just again, was just a good fit when I moved into this place. The Perlman TM one is such a brilliant microphone. And if you ever have the privilege of dealing with Dave Perlman, Count yourself lucky, the guy is amazing. And he makes beautiful microphones, he really does this not an endorsement or anything. I just really liked the guy. But I got in here, and I'm in an apartment situation. And that microphone, I could hear the people upstairs changed their minds. I mean, it was so sensitive. So I ended up going with a 416, just because it's a lot more focused and you know, eliminates a lot of this sort of side noise that is so prevalent here. Yeah. So I've been bouncing back and forth between those two mics. Stuck with the me one and V as a preamp because it just suited what I was doing. But that's, that's the biggest challenge, I think is you do not have to spend a ton of money. You just need to find what fits you comfortably and properly and well.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Yeah, you have to pick up on a couple of your points. I definitely think the biggest lesson I've learned from going from sort of, you know, one voice over to pro voiceover was to like keep your overheads as low as possible, especially in the beginning absolute, like you have to really like I mean, I moved to the country, so I had to pay it. So I only paid like, I don't know, $200 a week rent and I was like, literally only have to make $200 a week, I've got my gear already, like let's just do this. And then it takes the pressure off and suddenly you're not desperate to get working. It makes a lot of big difference. And as part of that the whole gear thing like you say like you build up your stable start really simple. And to be honest, there's never been a better time to buy this gear because the gear that you get for $200 now is as good as the gear you got for $1,000 About 10 years ago, like without

Ray Porter

question. My first setup was a RODE NT one and a joemeek preamp that I bought at musician's friend, which was a chain here. Yeah, you know, not a lot of money and it served me fine. And I ended up actually giving that microphone to someone else when I found something that fit better but yeah, don't be don't be fooled into it. Now. Conversely,

there's a lot of equipment out there that is what's a polite way of saying well what one would find at a wastewater treatment plant, we'll leave it at that

you really have to like you know, you got to balance a little bit between don't impoverished yourself but if this is going to be your gear, spend the money a little bit

Toby Ricketts

yeah, if you know you're going to be doing this for a while and you don't want to replacement to yours because you will have to otherwise like I think a 416 is it's sits in such a nice place especially like I did a secondhand for 16 you can get one for 600 bucks. Then belt what I did, yeah, exactly the same. So I've got 600 bucks, I used it for probably five years. And and funny story in my old studio, which is just over there. And it's literally I commissioned it from a company that makes children's play houses. So they built this thing and flat packed it and then I just got I spent all the money on acoustic stuff for the inside. But I only treated one corner because you know, as you know, acoustic stuff is really expensive and soundproofing is really expensive. And so I did just like one corner and the roof and then pointed the 416 into that back corner so that it's only picking up all of the sound deadening stuff and it doesn't pick up stuff that's coming from behind it, you know, to save money with it. And that lasted me a long time. Then I bought this mic, which of course is not like a hypercardioid it's not like a shot it's not just picking up in one direction it's picks up all the way around and I speak field and it sounded terrible in that booth. It just sounded horrific. And I thought this was gonna be like, This is gonna really up my game and it sounded worse. And so it was I was like what you know, what does it mean? And then I figured it out of course. was just picking up all the ambience in the studio, it's the wrong, it's not tuned for the studio anymore. And so I ended up building this place kind of around this microphone because I really wanted it to work. And I was like, I need a new studio, let's just do it properly. So now the whole room is treated

Ray Porter

and well, that's the thing is you make whatever decisions you need to make, you know. But you know, as well that there is, you know, there are endless people saying this is the kind of the be all and end all. I mean, you know, without slagging any particular companies, I noticed that there are a whole lot of companies that make these filters that fit on the mic stand and make a nice sort of arch. Yeah, around the back of the mic.

Toby Ricketts

Originally developed for trumpet players, actually, like it was originally. Okay, I get it. Yeah, it makes sense that way, but

Ray Porter

it's like, a noisy bit is not there the noisy bit, you know, behind it, you know, and I tried them. I said this because I tried them. I tried it all. Absolutely. And, you know, it's just like new neural.

Toby Ricketts

It seems like it's gonna work visually. But it just doesn't. It looks the business. Yeah. Especially ones with perforated steel backings and Oh, god, yeah. Shaped foam.

Ray Porter

They look cool. You look like yeah, when I found out that, you know, especially when you're on the road, because I have a little sort of road rig that I bring with me. You know, for auditions or whatever, while I'm out and about possibly the greatest venue I found to record and when you're on the road is inside your car inside your partner's car?

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. I was about seven, you can get away with like a decent iPhone or a Samsung Galaxy, and just literally do the voice recorder, do a little bit of post. And it's fine. urgence it's fine. Sure.

Ray Porter

And a lot of those little mics that will plug into your iPhone or your iPad or whatever are actually okay. Yeah, no, obviously test them, you know, you know, I'm not saying like the big ass USB mics or whatever. But there's some little ones that do the job. And as electronics get better and better and better, you don't have to spend for God's sakes, don't buy the name. You know what I mean? Yeah, especially if you're starting out, it's just like,

Toby Ricketts

these those. There's time, some gaming companies now are insisting that people have like a UID, seven or a tail and 103 Or like, or a 416. Like, they say you can only do the kick, if you have this mic. And it's like a How are you going to tell without doing a zoom call? And like, because I don't know that many people that can pick up a mic, because there's so much there's so many more things to cover the sound like most of the things a little bit your interface, but mostly the processing you do afterwards. So like, it's like how you're going to tell that and it kind of does, it's kind of editorialize this and kind of, you know, put the gates up for people who haven't necessarily got the gear, which I think is a bit, especially when there's so many blanks available now nowadays, it's

Ray Porter

a little bit not okay. I mean, I think I think there may be some of that is, is you know, certain people within that company trying to justify their own position. You and I both know that the online forums are filled with people with golden ears. Who can hear the subtle transients, you know, yeah, and I submit that that's horseshit.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it gets a bit like a modern art at some stage where you're like, No one actually just throw paint Canada canvas, and then explain kind of afterwards.

Ray Porter

But I also I mean, I can also get why a production company might want to put up some barriers, given that they're going to be getting a wide variety of auditions, you know, with DB levels that look like Satan's roller coaster, and, you know, horrible sound quality and all of that, that they want, you know, the people to exercise a bit of control. I mean, it does pay to pay a little bit of attention to making sure that you are ready before you go public with your brilliant voice over talent.

Toby Ricketts

That's a good point. And the reason is, like the U 87. is an industry standard, because it's been around for ages, and everyone just knows knows it. And they know what it's capable.

Ray Porter

Everybody knows that they know what it's going to sound like. And a lot of engineers are really familiar with it and with the 416 they know what it's going to do. And all of that there's a lot to be said for that. But I do think that like that kind of hard line gear specific sort of thing is a little bit odd. The information is out there. If you go online, I mean, my God, you know, if you're watching this now, subscribe to this student's work, you know, he'll take you through it, he'll tell you, you know, what the standards are and what's needed. Typically, I've found when you're auditioning for things, whether it's a movie or a video game, or commercials or whatever, they like to have it within a certain range of dB. They like you know, there's some people that still love 1644 One, you know, and all of that stuff. Just pay attention, just read the stuff, you know, and try to do it. You don't have to have a 416 but if you do, don't buy one knew exactly, yeah, have is used and

Toby Ricketts

I've thrown it for 16 and a in a suitcase so many times and I've never had even any problems with it also,

Ray Porter

to fend off muggers, and they'll still record I mean, a literal

Toby Ricketts

shotgun mic like you can and then put a cartridge in it.

Ray Porter

I really hope I'm recording a Hemingway book next.

Toby Ricketts

I'd love to see someone do That model a 416 into it into an actual shotgun.

Ray Porter

Okay, that's horrifying. And a really interesting, you know, there's an audio book that just came out my friend Scott brick narrated it written by a guy named Landon beach and it's called Narrator And the premise is essentially, like Stephen King's misery. It's an audiobook listener who like takes things a little bit too far. Wow. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

So isn't it? So that's written specifically for an audio book?

Ray Porter

I think it's, I think it's a print book as well. But But obviously, you know, it came out as an audio book and Scott brick, you know, is the God King so they know,

Toby Ricketts

gosh, that's

Ray Porter

so elevated, he had me like, right, because in the foreword, the author was saying such nice things about Scott break, and Scott called me and was like, I feel gross. So I was like, I'll record it for you. So I did. So he paid me to say nice things about him. That's nice. That's our friendship. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

I'm just gonna say like, we talked a little bit about Simon Vance, who also has a guitar, addiction idea, friend whiskies and you're all kind of in the neighborhood doing the same thing. So you get together for like, audio book parties.

Ray Porter

We don't get together for audio book parties, we get together to just like, you know, hang out and be dudes and be silly. I don't I don't really like a lot of audio book. Events. Yeah. Just because nobody knows each other by face unless you're friends, you know, just in the real world. So you wear a nametag. And so there's a whole lot of like, Oh, hi, hi. Oh, hi. You know, because then you have a context, because we're all shut ins. And we're sitting around, you know, you know, people by voice, or maybe by a promotional photograph. Yeah. That said, I do love, you know, a lot of people in the audiobook community, but the Simon and Scott are friends, you know, and we, yeah, we might talk a little bit of business now. And again, but for the most part, now, it's a lot of just general sustained silliness, which I prefer,

Toby Ricketts

it's so important. It's so important, and especially in these creative industries, where you because if you did it so seriously, all the time, the creative pursuits, you just would, you know, you'd end up sort of hating anyway. So I think you probably do need that well released as

Ray Porter

an actor when I was when I was doing a lot of theater. And a lot of Shakespeare, primarily. I always was puzzled by several of my friends who, you know, the last book they read had to do with theater, or the last thing they watched was a documentary on the RSC or they went and it's like, okay, you're only eating from that one small part of the menu, you're missing all the nutrition and all the deliciousness of other things. And I think ultimately, you what you produce is going to be kind of bland, unless you're actually living a life. And I do believe that the same is true. For anybody who does anything creative, whether it's music, voiceover work, you know, whether you're a voice actor, or an actor who is not behind a microphone all the time. That distinction has always bothered me. Are you an actor or a voice? Actor?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Not so many of these questions I was gonna ask you are already coming up, and one of them was going to, but

Ray Porter

I didn't mean to answer all of them. Sorry. Sorry about that. I'm just gonna shut up.

Toby Ricketts

But like, we've touched into your history. And one of the things that I've, I've, you know, I've done some research and for the interview was, it was difficult to get a grasp, like your Wikipedia entry is not as as big as I expected it to be. And I don't know whether or not it's accurate, either. So like, take us back to the beginning. You've been an actor for a long time, like, tell us about your ducks and dives of getting into this industry and where you are now.

Ray Porter

Okay, well, I gotta go way back. Actually, I was. My parents were both actors in New York. I was born in New York. And then before I had anything to say about it, I was two years old, they whisked me off to a small town in Indiana, and that's where I grew up. And I always grew up around theater, and around performance. You know, my grandfather was also in the business. So it was always just sort of there. And because it was kind of the family business, I was like, Well, I'm not going to do that. I didn't know what I was going to do. But I wanted to find other things. I went to work for a radio station. When I was in high school. I was at WW que si in Kokomo, Indiana country music. I hated country music at the time. Don't mind it, you know now, but I hated it then. But I was a country music DJ and I did news and all that. And it was really fun. You know, it's 16 and 17. Trying to get my voice down low. I shudder to think what I sounded like. And then had an opportunity to go see a production of a play. I think it was in high school or something and it came out and was right. That's me. That's what I want to do. I went to the California Institute of the Arts here in LA to get an acting degree. I tell people, I didn't go to college. I went to collage. It was a very interesting school. I Um, and then, after graduation, I kind of hung around LA a little bit, you know, just starting out, like trying to get work, that sort of thing played in a band did all that stuff. I had an audition for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in 1990, and got it got the job. And I was at that point, trying to decide whether I was going to stay in LA and be an actor or move to Nashville and do music. Country music got me again and got this offer for six months of work at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland. And I was like now, okay, so I told everybody in LA like, you know, I'll be back in six months. I'm just gonna go do this thing. And I got up there. And I was there for 18 seasons. Because it was beautiful. It was challenging work. It was work that I loved. It was people that I loved. And it was incredible. And in the meantime, kept my hand in with VoiceOver doing like local commercials and things like that selling tires in Medford, Oregon. Just as a supplement to the income which was weird, but cool.

Toby Ricketts

Hamlet sells

Ray Porter

tires. Yes, exactly. For soothe my Lord and then aluminum siding. So and people when it started to happen, I would have colleagues come up and go. Did I hear you for the debate here? You do an ad for the Jackson County Fair. We're standing there in our armor, and you know, and stuff like that getting ready to go on? And I'm like, No, I'm sorry. Do you mean the Jackson County Fair? Like what? Like I'm a whore. What do you want? So anyhow. And then I came to LA Finally, I've been dipping down into LA and doing TV and film and that sort of thing in the off seasons. But then I got married and I decided probably a better idea to be, you know, a husband rather than a phone bill. So I left the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and came down here. And I felt a lot like, you know, in Shawshank Redemption, when the guys get out, and they're, they're, like, institutionalized. I was like, Wait, there's no rehearsal today at one, there's no shots and I was I had been so locked into that schedule. And, you know, I don't know whether you knew this or not, but you know, in in Hollywood, there's not a lot of work, which was a surprise. Anyway. You know, so I booked a few things here and there, but it wasn't really sustainable. And I was also just creatively just frustrated because after so long of creative output, and then suddenly none. It really was like withdrawing from some sort of drug. So I contacted Blackstone audio up in Ashland, Oregon, where I just been doing theater. And they were like, Yes, send us an audition. And I slept together, you know, some equipment and recorded a thing in my closet and send it up there and they sent me a book. And I recorded that in my closet and it did pretty well and they sent me another and another. And I got nominated for two audio awards that first year and it was all in my closet.

Toby Ricketts

When he was that? Oh God 90s

Ray Porter

Long ago everything was in black and white.

Toby Ricketts

That long. There was tapes cassette tapes, yes, it

Ray Porter

was all Oh my god. Yeah. cassette tapes. Yeah. God Yeah, it was still the days of because like the iPad hadn't even really caught on yet. So I want to say 2006 2007 maybe ish, right? But they would FedEx you you know the manuscript one sided pages so you'd get this phone book you know and then stop recording change pages the whole thing was nuts. Did that for a while, got a booth eventually found one USD decided I needed at this point it was a going concern and a tax write off I would like to step up the equipment a little bit. So I got the TM one I got the M one L and NV and just continued and it just you know it's momentum. It's snowballed. One thing leads to another, you know, and an old friend who said nothing succeeds like success. It's a catch 22 of like, how do I become an audiobook narrator narrated audiobooks. You know, it really is a momentum thing. It starts out very slowly, and then suddenly, you're drowning under a pile of work. I'm not entirely sure which I'd prefer on a hot day like today. I'm grateful for the work of course, and I'm grateful that I get to do this. It also enabled me to have a creative outlet to be doing stuff that was creative. So I ended up doing better in auditions. So I ended up booking more acting jobs. So I ended up you know, and it all kind of feeds into each other. The greatest lesson I learned from all of that was patience with myself with the industry. And with the process. It doesn't happen instantly.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And sort of, you know, you've really got to maintain that passion you have for the work despite all of the cut downs and the auditions you don't get and you know, self doubt you've got to kind of quiet in that self doubt because it does come.

Ray Porter

Yeah, I mean, I have an impostor syndrome that's bigger than Shaquille O'Neal, you know, and it's equate. It's just, you know, it's not even quieting it down. It's just sort of making a deal. Like, okay, you can sit in the back today. Yeah. You know, I'll deal with you later.

Toby Ricketts

It does come with the territory and creative.

Ray Porter

It just does. I mean, you know, you know, this as well, you know, and the fact that we've been able to sustain ourselves and keep the wolf away from the door doing this stuff. Is is a blessing every day. It's I'm grateful every single day that I have gotten to do this. And it's opened up all sorts of things. You know, I happen to be in England, because at the time I was married to a person who was working on Zack Snyder's movie, the Justice League, Zack, who I knew personally up to that point, but I've never worked with found out because I don't I don't I narrate audiobooks from on him. And I don't put that out there. I'm just me. Yeah, so I've known him for a little over a year. And then he basically found out that I narrate audiobooks, and Zack is a guy who prefers to hear his scripts rather than sitting and just reading them. So he brought me in to read his scripts. So I was in there for rewrites, reading, you know, just so he could hear it. That's cool. And one day, he walked by me and he had an digital image of this character. Dark Side, it was like the big bad in the movie. He's like, What do you think he'd sound like? And I'm standing in a hallway. And we're at Warner Brothers leaves them and I went, and I just whipped you know, something off that I thought seemed appropriate to the image. Yeah. And two weeks later, somebody came up to me somebody's like, not Zach, just completely third party came over. I was like, so you're playing Darkside? And I was like, what? Wow. That was one of the weirdest ones because I didn't have to audition. I didn't, you know, it's just because I had worried at all.

Toby Ricketts

You did have to audition. You just didn't know it was an audition. Exactly. Yeah. And like, I feel like you you particularly are quite good at coming up with, with with characters on the fly. It was it was, again, as part of my research I looked so the little audio port, that audible video you did recently where they just hit you with errors. And Shakespeare said Go, which was

Ray Porter

born in the same T shirt. So yeah, I have more than one I promise.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. And and that was that was really interesting in terms of like seeing your process for characters, which which we'll go into once we've sort of, you know, covered to where you're coming up to today. But like your your your dark sea book and its dark side, it's that seems to be what you're most sort of known for now, because it's such a big production. And you've done a bit of unscreened stuff that was in motion capture with that dark side, actually, as well.

Ray Porter

There was some motion capture with that. Yes, I did do mocap, which me and Kieran Hines in black lycra suits is not an image anybody wants. And then we also did this really weird a lot of the scenes that we did, we were wearing this headgear that had two cameras that are right in your face and two really bright lights. So they only catch this so they can CGI, the facial expressions and the mouth shape and all of that. It was quite a long process actually. That would you know, I would do some and then there'd be downtime for a long time. And then I'd be called in to do you know another thing and, ya know, I've done a ton of like, you know, it's funny, because after the movie came out, Zach's version of the movie came out, because Mr. Whedon decided to cut me from his version of the 2017 thing. So after it came out, suddenly, all over social media people were like, oh my god, he was in Frasier. Oh, my God. He was in a fight. Oh, my God. He was in politically, you know, and it's like, that's the that's kind of a lot of being a character actor is you know, it's like, oh, you're, you're

Toby Ricketts

I know you from somewhere. Yeah.

Ray Porter

Familiar. Yeah, you must get. So you know, yeah, I mean, but it's been, it's been inordinately fun. I've loved going to comic cons and meeting people and and, you know, discovering just how much that stuff really matters. It was never really my thing. I always respected comic books and you know, and that kind of stuff. And I'm a big sci fi fantasy person, you know, but I never really got it and seeing the effect that it had on these people who really love it was was very humbling and also very gratifying and really cool. And I have a lot of people Like when I'm at a con signing autographs, or whatever, a lot of people will come up with a physical copy of a book that I've narrated, and they want me to sign it because they're just there for the audiobook stuff, which is weird, but cool. And yeah, you know,

Toby Ricketts

it's, I don't like I you know, as far as audio books go, I don't read books. I don't have time to read books, but I have I love listen to audiobooks when I'm doing other things like driving or gardening or whatever things because it's so, so damn time efficient. I read a book while you're driving somewhere. Like it's just this miracle. And I enjoy a lot more along. Yeah. And I because my mind kind of wanders if I'm trying to read the text. And I realize I'm four pages down. And I haven't understood any of this. And I have to go back and read the same four pages, again, was audio somehow gets into the brain a bit more. This is

Ray Porter

gonna sound weird and arcane, but just let me Let me stretch this out for as long as I can, and then gracefully pull me out of it when I get caught in a trap. Okay, okay. I trust you. Okay, doing Shakespeare, doing Shakespeare on the West Coast of America, in modern times, was a bit of an argument in and of itself, right. And there were a lot of people who would come because they felt like they should get some culture. And so they would sit there and be bored out of their minds and hated or fall asleep or whatever. And I heard so many people who actually work for a living, going, like I just, I don't get Shakespeare, I don't like it. Why does he take three pages to say he walked down the road? What's the point of it. And you know, people were forced to read it in school. Everybody in some teacher slapped this in front of you. And you had to try to make sense of this word salad. And people walk away from it. Like, it's really not for me, you know, another word for a theater or a venue to hear things as an auditorium, because you would go back in Elizabeth, oftentimes the language was you would go to hear a play, you never went to see a play, you want to hear the play. It is an auditory experience. reading Shakespeare is about as useful as looking at the blueprints for Westminster Abbey. Yes, it's interesting. But for me, I prefer going into Westminster Abbey, knowing what it smells like knowing what my voice sounds like. And the voices of others sounds, the feel of it inside. And you'll never get that, from looking at the blueprint. Well, the same is true of Shakespeare. And I think of a lot of other forms. receiving it. auditorially, as you said, while you're doing something else allows it to get in in a different way. Ideally, if if, if I as a narrator have done my job, to stay the hell out of the way of a text. I don't really want you to notice me, I want you to notice the book when I'm doing it. And if I do that, right, then yeah, you are gonna get maybe more out of it necessarily than you would visually. There are other people who prefer to read they don't like that distraction. You know, fortunately, there's plates for both.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. And, and even as a third dimension. You know, I found my I found I caught myself finding at the end of the baba verse Book One. We Are Legion We are Bob, what you know, right? Yeah, syntactically, that I was like, I'd love to see what this looked like as a movie. And I caught myself and thought the movie would never be as good as what I'd imagined in my head. Like, the pictures are better. Like with radio, I think the quote was from a little girl back in the BBC days, and like, it's

Ray Porter

so true. Absolutely. My mother said that all the time. She grew up in the Depression era. And she said, There is nothing more terrifying or magical than what you can do in your own head. When it's being said to you on the radio, movies. TV could never do justice to what I imagined, you know? Exactly. So and I took that on, I took that on early on, I did it with Shakespeare to is like try to try to bring it but stay out of the way the text enough so that the person hearing it was able to like form and fashion whatever they got out of Shakespeare on their own, you know. And I agree with you, I do think that auditory stuff. It sparks the imagination in a way that the visual when you don't have the visual information, you're forced to supply it in your mind. Yeah, exactly. And we are all of us infinitely more creative than maybe many of us would let on. So I like that.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it's brilliant. Right. Switching that switching gears now. So right, we've established audiobooks, very important. Love hearing stuff by audio. So you get a book in the mail. What's your process? Like? I mean, I think people a lot of people assume that you read the entire book first and make notes and stuff. Is that or do you cold read, and then kind of, you know, go backwards and forwards as needed. You know,

Ray Porter

I, there used to be a real stigma attached to, to this and I don't necessarily know why. But there are a lot of people who are there a lot of people who are able to give their best work by sitting down and really going through the entire book and like parsing out which characters which I know people who will highlight in different colors when certain characters are talking. People have visual references, pictures and things like that. Mmm. And for me, I tried all that, because I felt I should. And the books ended up not doing very well in the reviews and not doing very well in sales. And I discovered that for me, the immediacy of it is really, really important. And that does mean that you're going to make a lot more mistakes, you're going to have to go back and covers things, you're going to have to fix stuff. Most famously, there was a book that, you know, this character, the author didn't really supply any information at all early on as to what this character was. And I got the impression of what this person looked and sounded like in my mind, and I did that accordingly until page 268, when it turned out to be an English girl with red hair. And I had to go back and redo all the dialogue. That was my own, you know, but so now, basically, I will go through lightly, I also will solicit, you know, from the author, like, how do you see these characters, and it doesn't guarantee that it's going to be like that, necessarily. But it's great to have that information. But then it's more about the immediacy of it. First of all, I don't have a hell of a lot of time to like, put stuff on it. I literally, it passes through my hands to you. Which going back to my earlier statement, I do think is the way to go. I don't have a lot of time to overthink it. It's just, you know, just go and do it. And that for me has done better. The books have done better. The reviews have been a lot kinder, the response has been a lot better. When that immediacy is preserved. Yeah, you know, and I mean, being in LA you, you have to learn how to cold read efficiently and well, pretty quickly. Cuz you'll have casting directors be like, yeah, that's not the right role for you try this one. You're like, Hello.

Unknown Speaker

Yeah, I was unwilling the other one.

Ray Porter

Exactly. When I was unwilling grace, and I rehearse to a scene for an entire week. And on the night, we did it in front of a live audience. And the two producers came over and went, Yeah, that's not working. So you say this, you say this, you say this, you say this, you say this? Okay. Well, sound? Yeah. Can you do it? You know, so you'd learn to get real comfortable with, you know, this sort of immediate? It's not like a hammock? Yeah. So yeah, for me, it's the immediate approach has always been best. Yes, there are probably more pitfalls. But that's what quality control is for. I will make huge mistakes that, you know, God bless the the people who prove them and the engineers, and we'll go back and we'll fix them. I've been caught out in a couple of mistakes, embarrassingly. So. I do try to do as much research as I can. But I still get caught on stuff. I mean, we're talking, you know, 300 plus pages. I'm not going to catch everything. But you know, the deal is to try to preserve what the author's intent was what, you know, the author wrote you a letter, you the listener, and it's my job to deliver the mail. That's, that's it. So

Toby Ricketts

in order to, like, establish what their motives and then

Ray Porter

sometimes yes, sometimes no, sometimes, I mean, I've solicited, you know, certain authors and been like, hey, you know, I'd love to get your thoughts on and never hear from them ever. Or I'll finish the book and be like, hey, I really liked reading your book. I hope it does well, and I never hear from them at all. There are other authors who have since become very dear friends of mine. Jonathan Mayberry is a great example of that. I've done his Joe ledger series for a number of years, we have since become God more than friends. We're like family. And what's funny is now there's actually interplay between us in his books. He will he started doing this years ago. Part of why part of why he became such a dear friend to me was I made a joke about like, oh, yeah, next, you're gonna throw me some curveball like some weird Latvian pronunciation, you know, or something. And he did in the next book. And then it became a thing of like, find the traps that Jonathan has laid for me in the book.

Toby Ricketts

That's hilarious. And he does one of his characters Ray Porter.

Ray Porter

Yeah, but he'll throw curveballs at me, you know. And the most, I think the biggest one was he did this great book based on the wastelands. Which is a role playing game, but it's like this weird sci fi Wild West thing. And there was a character in there who was educated in England, basically raised in England British accent, but he was Lakota Sioux. And he wrote in a couple of lines in Lakota, which I happen to speak a little love because I had a friend who was a Lakota Sundancer back when I was doing theater, so I immediately texted him and was like, fu dude, I know Lakota. Hahaha he was like, damn it. I thought I was gonna get with that

Toby Ricketts

one. Oh, that's hilarious. Yeah, that's fantastic. And some of the other other projects that you've done I know we talked about the sort of like the comics, you know, having respect for comics and other things. I was very excited when you and I didn't even realize while I was listening, but that you're in the Sandman series, we're saying the credits at the end, and I was like, oh, I want to go back and do I know and I had to go back and see which ones you were which is a testament to your

Ray Porter

team. Yes. I'm very happy to hear that. Yeah. Thank you.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it was. It was fantastic. So much fun. I say to everyone, like if you want to hear like one of the best radio dramas ever recorded. The Sandman series is by far like, incredible. Well, you know,

Ray Porter

Dirk Dirk Maggs, aside from being a very, very dear friend, Simon Vance introduced Yes, actually is an absolute genius at what he does. Without question. You should honestly I would, if he if he can find the time and I'll put in a word, but you should have him on this because the dude is a genius.

Toby Ricketts

And he's spoken for the brain one voice conference recently in May. So as a follow up to that I might invite him on the show.

Ray Porter

Honestly, it would be worthwhile, seriously, and I'll tell him, you know, like, hey, talk to this guy. He's cool, you know? But yeah. It was amazing.

Toby Ricketts

What was the process like for that? Was that recording with other actors? Was it on your own? Yeah, I

Ray Porter

went to England. And for the first one. Anyway, I went to England. And we were at the audible studios in the glass house down by the Barbican. And crammed into this, you know, very sweaty, Hot Studio 11 actors in a in a booth built for maybe six. And some of the most mind bendingly brilliant talents I've ever seen or heard, and I got to be in the same room with them, many of them, you won't know their names, some of them you will. But we all just kind of got in the room, and we jammed and it was such a fantastic experience. And we were all very sad when it was over. It was like being a part of this rep company. And yet nobody knew each other. And so somebody would step up to the mic, and you'd be like, Damn, he can do that. What, oh, I better bring my A game. And so you got people like riffing and playing together. And the end result was amazing. Obviously, with the pandemic, Part Two was sadder for me because I recorded it right here. With Dirk directing. I didn't get that same sort of great, you know, playing with other people kind of thing. I mean, I got to work with Derek, which is always wonderful. But God, that first one, that was an amazing experience, you know, I mean, standard between Michael Sheen and Neil Gaiman doing the Beelzebub stuff, and we're just, you know, feeding off each other and doing this, it was just incredible. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

it's just such a treat when you get such a great text and such a seminal kind of like, well, directed by the best in the business voiced by the best in the business. It's just the the result is heavenly.

Ray Porter

Well, and I've been such a fan of Neil Gaiman for so many years that you know, nevermind meeting him. Just the chance to say his words was so incredible.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, his world building is just next level, like it really is.

Ray Porter

Phenomenal, phenomenal. And I've just always loved his, his voice, not his speaking voice not as narrating but his literary voice. I've always just, it's been it's one of those things has always drawn me in

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, listening to him narrate his own audiobooks is such a pleasure because you realize how much he writes the way he talks. And he's got this little really dumpy, dumpy, that he's got this some kind of it's not iambic pentameter. It's like, we should call it gaming Pentameter or something like this. He is yeah, he has a very specific way of reading books, which, which I've drawn a lot from, you know, and I've been inspired by,

Ray Porter

there's a there's an over arching kindness, both in his writing and in the way he says, his texts that I that I adore. And it can be talking about the scariest thing and you're, you're comforted somehow. But I mean, you know, I picked up I picked up his copy of never where years and years ago and I still go back and reread it periodically. It's just that damn good. And so I got to do his stuff. I got to play Burbidge in the Shakespeare thing, which was amazing. You know, and yeah, so it was a little bit nervous. I'm standing there in England with a bunch of British actors about to say Shakespeare and you know, I did okay, but

Toby Ricketts

Fantana fantastic. Some of your other work that I've also taken so much from I mean, Project tail Mayer was fantastic. Like that was a really nice piece of work and is doing very well in the sort of sci fi community and further you know, it's that was that was a real treat anything particularly about that series that you enjoyed, well, I

Ray Porter

love I love Andy Weir, his writing and you know, that was one of those books. People always ask me, How long does it take to narrate a book and I always say, you know, and it sounds like I'm dragging crystals out and making Graham's in the dirt. But it really depends on the book. The book takes as long as it wants. That's a book that was over too soon. I was sad when I was done with it. That's a book that I also would get up in the morning and be like, I get to go record more. You know, it was just because his his writing is so fantastic. And I had such an immediate affinity for the language and everything it was, it was a great fit. I loved it. I loved it. And I'm so happy that it's done well. Because he's a damn good writer that Andy Weir. Yeah, yeah, I look forward to what else he does. You know,

Toby Ricketts

it did sound like to me a lot like you. I mean, you're a great actor, but it sounded like that character fitted your character quite well as well. You know, it wasn't we were

Ray Porter

real close. Yeah, yeah, we were definitely real close. I loved I identified very quickly with the irreverence, the sarcasm, the occasional snark. And wonder, you know, as a massive astronomy geek myself, you know, and a big science geek I was, I mean, it ticked all the boxes for me. Yeah, absolutely. It was great. It's privileged to narrate that book.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And you, you seem to gravitate towards sciency work, so they'd gravitate towards you probably more accurately. Yeah,

Ray Porter

it's been more that's been kind of the way of things in the last few years, you know, I recently actually had a conversation with a producer, and when can I do other things? You know, just because I want to diversify the portfolio a little bit, too, you know, I mean, my earlier stuff is all over the shop, you know, I've got nonfiction physics books, I've got, you know, modern crime stuff, and horror, and all of that. And it just seems like, you know, obviously, in the wake of the success of Hail Mary, there's a lot of sci fi authors who are like, Yeah, I want that guy. You know, so I, so I've ended up getting a fair few sci fi books. And, you know, mostly pretty good.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Then I mentioned, there's a queue these days, like, do you have you got a pile that you're kind of working through

Ray Porter

pretty busy, I'm under a big ol pile right now. And I've got people that are, you know, just independently, you know, because I tend to work primarily with publishers now. But I'll have people reach out to me, like on Facebook or whatever, and bless them, you know, they're like, Hey, I'd love you to narrate my book. And it's like, yeah, I would probably love to do it. Talk to me in 2023. Because right now, it's just, you know, I'm, uh, you know, I'm gonna finish this with you today. And get back because I'm behind on one book that I've got to finish, right. And then I've got another one that I'm getting close to the red line on, you know, so I just, it's like, I gotta clear the deck. Yeah, I've got so many of these books in the pipe. So thankfully, and I'm grateful for that. Yeah, but it's a lot, you know,

Toby Ricketts

exactly. And so on. And then I want to talk about characters because you really can specialize in characters and, and differentiating them within a book, like your narrator voice is sort of very similar to the voice of using now it's easy to sort of fall back on that's, you know, that's that's obviously, and it tends to

Ray Porter

be, it tends to be like whoever the protagonist is, will also sound like this. Yeah, just because I think it's a lot more identifiable select, Bob is going to sound like me and Rylan. Grace will sound like me. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

yeah. And to pick up on the Bob theme, and for those who haven't heard the, the Bob of this series is fantastic. The most interesting thing about it is I feel like it's a real study in how to differentiate characters, because without too many spoilers, the main character gets cloned, and, and cloned and cloned, and but each one has had is a bit different from the other ones. And so you have to, you have to identify, yeah, identify, so you kind of so you, you start off as this one guy, he splits into two, and then you need to tell the listener which one they're listening to, even though they're a clone. So what was your approach to trying to find? And some of them don't even it's not really in the texts, like, what their quirk is, some of them it is, but like, often it was just gonna your call?

Ray Porter

Well, you know, in I mean, in the case of like, you know, Homer, Dennis made it really easy, because, you know, he decided to be annoying and just do the Homer Simpson voice or his approximation of the Homer Simpson voice. Yeah. But there were others that were Yeah, very different. And they chose their own names, you know, so then it became a thing of like, a finding in the dialogue, in the written dialogue, the way they respond to something. You know, obviously the most telling thing as an actor, you know, the first thing I do whenever I get cast in a role, is I'll look through the script and see what other characters say about that character. Because there's great information to be gleaned from that. Whether you toe the line on what their description of you is, or not, you have that information. And so that's always good. Sometimes it's in the book, sometimes it's not. And I knew it was going to be a challenge for me and for the listener to differentiate between, say, Riker, and you know, Bob, and these various others and there are a lot lot and then you and a God, there'd be more I'd have to turn a page and be like, Oh God, I gotta do five more dudes. Yeah. And it became more about intention and less about inflection or mouth position or, you know, whatever. A great deal was accomplished in changing the velocity of speech and the just the internal intention.

Toby Ricketts

But I wouldn't forthright or whether they were kind of Meek or

Ray Porter

whether they were forthright, whether there was you know, whether there was, you know, more or less music in their voice, where their heart happened to be sitting at that time. So, you know, you'd have a, you know, and it's a very subtle difference, but you'd have a situation of, you know, like, I don't know, you know, Bob, you know, St. God, it's a really beautiful day today. And Riker saying, guess it's a really beautiful day today. Real subtle, real different, but they say, you know, yeah, what notes Am I playing? You know? So and that was always a challenge, but a fun one. To do.

Toby Ricketts

You keep on top of the characters, because of course, they keep appearing. I mean, the book, I haven't finished the series, but like, the it's consistent the voices across the books, and, like, I'm up to about 36 Different Bobs now. Like, how have you kept track? If you have a post it note that says, oh, remember Riker, he's a bit like the one of Star Trek and you know,

Ray Porter

I will actually go back and sometimes listen to various sound samples of the people. I mean, it's easy with the baba verse, because it's all variations of me. You know, there's a few characters that aren't Bob, in the book that I that I've got, you know, instantly, you know, Guppy sounds like Admiral Ackbar. You know, Bridget, you know, as an Irish woman, you know, the various generals and that sort of thing. So that's one thing. The Quinlan ones, you know, that was another challenge of like, how do I come up with, you know, these, these voices for these characters, based on whatever their mouth structure is, that's in a later book, you'll find that out. But it's a lot of it, it sounds real, like, but I just I remember people's faces, I this is true in life, like, you and I could walk up at the same pub, and I'd be like, Oh, hey, um, I mean, I would know you because of your face. I wouldn't necessarily, I'd be terrible at remembering names. Do you know what I mean? There's a connection there that that kind of is a connection there with the face. And so for me, when, when a character pops up in a book, it happens most of the time, not all the time, but most of the time. It's like, an image of what they look like will pop up in my head. And then there's no other way to talk than what that face. Yeah, no, yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Because he knows the person. And they you know what? Their loss? Yeah,

Ray Porter

yeah. So you know, yes, my son what his father does for a living, he sits in a blanket for talking in different voices and seeing different faces. And they pay him

Toby Ricketts

advice basically sums it up, doesn't it?

Ray Porter

Pretty much. Pretty much.

Toby Ricketts

Like how important is life experience and bringing these characters to life? Because you know, you, if an 18 year old wants to write a book about a 30 year old, it just doesn't it like it doesn't seem possible, unless they're incredibly talented. And watch, I've watched a lot of other people do that kind of stuff. And I hear your life experience come through a lot on the big life moments of these characters.

Ray Porter

Well, obviously, it's going to be because it's the most readily available, obviously, it's the easiest to get to because it's, you know, right there I lived it. You know, the, you know, the old adage that like, once you're old enough to properly play King Lear, you're too old to properly play King Lear because it'll kill you. Once you've acquired, you know, that life experience and all that I do think that to a degree, that's important, but I really, really hate gatekeeping in anything like our craft. So I would always counter like, you know, the thing with the 18 year old, you know, 18 year olds have come up through a childhood that you and I know absolutely nothing about. It's true. They're going to have wisdom and depth in areas that you and I simply cannot understand. And it's going to affect them. And so I think that there are massively eloquent performances that can come out of someone who's in their early teens, but the performance is miles deep. I do think that there is regardless of how old you are or who you are or what your background is, there is absolutely no substitute whatsoever for being a voracious reader. I really do believe that. The more you read, and I'm talking about starting from childhood, you know, you should always have a book going have different kinds of lots of variety of different things. The more that you do that, the more you're going to understand. It's less about life experience than it is about human wisdom. Wisdom about humans compassion for that, which is different, that sort of thing. And that's going to add more colors to your palette if you choose to be an actor.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, feeling things about things. Like very nicely. Yeah, yeah.

Ray Porter

Yeah. Yeah. I mean, ultimately, you know, any, any good scene is just humans being. To me, there's no more ready source of undiluted humanity, then a wide variety of reading. And you should never stop. If you're eight, or if you're at eight, you should have a book going, always, you know, I just I've always believed that it's good nutrition. But if you decide to do this for a living, it's, it's essential.

Toby Ricketts

Even if it is audio books, hopefully,

Ray Porter

even if it's audio books, yes.

Toby Ricketts

So in coming up with these different characters, and like bringing them to life, there's a number of I like to talk about when doing voiceover for any reason for commercial or for even elearning. and stuff. There's different kind of levers, you can pull in terms of this. There's like tone, and there's Tambor, and there's pitch, and there's tempo and there's like, then there's things like accents as well. Um, it sounds like you come from a very, like, intuitive place. So you're not really necessarily consciously thinking, Oh, I'll do this character a little bit faster. It's just what feels right in the time. But like, what are some of the levers that you kind of have at your disposal? If you were thinking about how to construct the character? That that might be sort of uncommon one's sense?

Ray Porter

Sort of, yeah. You know, though, one, the one big thing that I have grappled with and I've struggled with, I don't know if this directly answers your question, but I have struggled for years with honestly and properly and respectfully, giving voice to women, characters and female characters. It's really easy to like slap a voice on hope for the best. And I haven't been satisfied with the results ever. It's always been a massive challenge. So I've recently started experimenting with the idea that there are a ton of women who speak in a lower pitch and a lower tambor than I do. When I live there, why not focus more on character? Why not focus more on that sort of thing, and let the audience fill in the information as best they can, having gone along with the conceit, that they're going to be told an entire story with a bunch of characters at the hands of one guy, you know, and I think it makes it more noticeable if I try to put something on like I'm doing a woman's voice now you know, kind of thing. And it takes the listener out. Again, do less, do less get to the humanity of it, get to the truth of it. Sure, there's things that I'll do, I'll pull like tempo changes for certain sequences or certain arguments or certain discussions. Sometimes with authors I have said before, that I despise adverbs with fire inside me that I have a hard time describing without using profanity. Example. Where are you going? He asked belatedly, why do you ask? She said quizzically, I'm not sure he said confusedly. Then they walked out both redundantly. eff off with your you know, first of all, stop telling me how to do the line. Second, stop telling the audience how to feel about what you're writing. If your characters aren't full enough or rich enough that they require some tacked on spotlight, then go back and write the character better. You know, I should understand based on the dialogue, since human beings only have the dialogue when they're talking to each other. I should get it from that. Yeah, sorry. Let's go. So Fox,

Toby Ricketts

that's good. It's a bit like clumsy exposition in movies. It's like we don't have time for this to unfold. I'll just have the main character tell someone else about it on the screen.

Ray Porter

Right, right. Exactly. You know, yeah, the classic freeze frame. That was me six months ago. And even in exposition there's a lot that can be done. And I think too few people focus on it. There's a great deal that can be done just by shifting your articulators around a little bit. You know, and not a lot of people employ it and I really would love to see more people experimenting with it. You know, you in your day to day, you know, delivery, the way you talk just on the street the way you talk when you're doing you know various bits of copy or a game or a book or whatever are going to move your jaw in a certain way. Move your tongue in a certain way. Put the air in certain place and the voice and a certain place in your body based on how you've lived and that's just sort of the happy place for you. Well try shifting that. You know, if you find you speak into chest voice most of the time, put it in your head. Now I've done nothing except just change where my voice lives. And that's a different character right there. If you know if the audience is willing to go along with it. That's a different character.

Toby Ricketts

You know? Yeah, shift the way pediments the way like mine, shifts the way your tongue

Ray Porter

your tongue moves around in your mouth just a little bit. And suddenly, it's a different, and I've done nothing except move some muscles around. Yeah, yeah, you know, it's no, it's, this is basic ship. It's like acting one on one. It's just shit. I'm finding out now on my own sitting in my sad blanket fort in Pasadena. But I love it. It's fun.

Toby Ricketts

It is. And I mean, I'm on the similar journey in terms of like, in teaching voiceover, which I do with Greg for the brand quite a bit. I find the truth, which I'm like, I just whistled, right past that, when I was learning how to do this and happen to start doing it. But like, and I find out so much by exploring how I know what I know, you know,

Ray Porter

there's no better education than teaching. In that true, you go back and you're having to focus on first principles, which I believe we all should do. You know, my friend Dirk, in addition to being the most genius producer ever, is also a massively talented drummer. And just this last week, because I spoke to him, just this last week, he was going into a drumming class. You know, go back to basics, learn the stuff, you know, recover that stuff you think you already know, you know? You know, what was it somebody said, you know, your assumptions are like a mirror every once in a while, it's a really good idea to wipe the mirror off so you can see better. And I think it's true, we especially if we've been on the game for a long enough time we've we've structured, the sorts of things that kind of hold us up. And we have these assumptions. And this is the way you do things, you should question those all the time I do constantly,

Toby Ricketts

what an interesting time to be having this discussion. Because over the last two years that we've had been having, especially in the West Coast of America, we've been having the inclusivity discussion and and the fact that it's no longer acceptable for like actors to play minorities in a kind of a derogatory fashion or in an a stereotypical fashion. Because that does not summarize an ethnicity, for example, but it's always been, like kind of the lazy way, but also the kind of the expected way, like, if you want the audience to know someone's Indian, then you'd like do an Indian accent. And but like this is the tension that's between acting, acting means playing other people. But this, like, we've had to change how we do that, based on these discussions.

Ray Porter

You know, for the longest time, there was a whole lot of people, you know, my mother used to tell me, I remember she told me this, I was really sad because I was up for a role and I didn't get it. And a person that I hated, got the role that I wanted. And my mother, who, you know, has forgotten more things about being an actor than I'll ever learn, said it was their turn. It was their turn, It'll be your turn. It just wasn't today. So many people, so many incredibly talented, brilliant people have never had their turn. So now, a lot of people are getting their turn. And I think that's right. Now, with that comes a lot of hurt a lot of assumptions, a lot of ignorance on every side. I want to believe that everybody is coming from a really good place in their heart with addressing this, but you know, I mean, in theater, you're seeing a lot less straight white dudes, you know, playing lead roles in theater right now. And I know that that's been hard for a lot of my straight white nude friends. However, it's been great for a lot of my, you know, queer friends of color, and different abilities and that sort of thing. They're getting a turn, and it's way overdue. I believe that, as Ian McKellen says, it's all going to kind of settle down. And people are going to recognize that acting is acting and living is living. But right now, people are getting their turn and I'm glad for that. You know, I'm not affected by you know, I don't get a job because my skin is this shade or my hair looks this way or whatever. I'm not bothered by that. Why should I be you know, it's somebody's turn. And that's great. Because there's been a whole bunch of people who, you know, I mean, I have friends who tell horror stories of getting called into an audition for something. And it's literally like, Oh, you're black, you know, kind of thing and horrifying. Um, I've never felt that way. I don't know what that is, I'm completely ignorant of that kind of pain. And so I'm not gonna even try to speak to it. So I think that, you know, I, I, quite often in doing audiobooks will be giving voice to characters who are women who are women of different ethnicities, men of different ethnicities, people of different nationalities, sometimes the author will say, he spoke with a heavy Indian accent. But if you say Indian accent, there's a million Indian accents, which one, you know. So, it requires me to be a lot more observant. And if anything I'm doing feels like a comfortable generalization. I go back and try to try to eliminate that, you know, there's an like, Yeah, I mean, there's a thing of like, you know, yeah, I mean, one of the most racist things I've ever heard in my life was someone saying, Well, you don't sound black, to one of my friends is like, That's horrific. Please don't ever say that again. Again, we are all of us. big, messy, diverse, huge, complicated species of mammal. And we express ourselves in a lot of different ways. And if I'm an actor, and I'm meant to hold the mirror up to reality, then I want to try to get that mirror as polished and clean as it can be. Without assumptions. To hold that mirror up. It doesn't mean that I'm scared, or I shy away from doing let's say, an angry woman who's black. And from south, you know, south of the Mason Dixon Line. I just need to be real damned accurate. And anytime I feel like I'm making any kind of an assumption. I don't dare. Now, on that same note, one of my good friends, Peter Klein's, who is an author I've narrated a million books for. And we've had some good success together with his audiobooks, had a new book coming out. And he reached out to me and he said, you know, the main character is a young Latina, and a young black man. And I'm like, I hope you find the right narrators for that. That's real different. And I would never, ever for a second, assume that I could do that.

So, you know, it's a very sensitive time. There's a lot of feelings around this. There's a lot of again, there's a lot of assumptions and ignorance and confusion, but I hope that through all of that stuff, everybody will endeavor to try to reflect humanity with as much sensitivity and awareness as possible in their performance. And we have to remember, it's acting. It's pretending this isn't real, you know, kind of straight actor play a gay person. I hope so. Enough, gay men have played straight people for a long time. You know? I mean, yeah, I mean, you know, as a soundbite, that's horrible. Please don't put that up as a soundbite. I'm gonna get such angry letters. But do you know what I mean? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. Um, you know, and I'm, again, I'm taking this from a comment that Ian McKellen made a few days ago of like, why would you deny yourself the gift of this actor if they are the most brilliant actor for this role? Why would you deny yourself their performance if it isn't? ticking every demographic that the character is, you know, I've played horrible murderers. I'm not a horrible murderer. I've played terrible racists. I hope I'm not a terrible racist. I do my best not to be. You know, I'm an actor. It's pretend I have to embody and give voice to characters that are as diametrically opposed to who I am as possible. That's the job.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. It comes with the territory, doesn't it? It comes with the

Ray Porter

territory. But I do like I do like that there's a whole lot more people being given an opportunity now both in audiobooks and in voiceover and on stage and on screen, because it's fair. Mm hmm. It's getting fairer. It's not quite fair yet, but it's getting there. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

exactly. Yeah. The impetus seems they had the kind of intention, like is definitely spreading to make it more fair, which is which has been a very welcomed.

Ray Porter

Absolutely, absolutely.

Toby Ricketts

Speaking of, you know, giving voice to other characters and things. I've always been an absolute accent nerd. Like I just love accents you've spent it's a brilliant place to learn different accents, especially up in the sort of like RSC, we're also has to diversify to know Within Stuff People Say like a British accent, it's like, wow, that narrows it down. Like American like this?

Ray Porter

Well, the thing I say to people, whenever they talk about a British accent, I'm like, you're talking about a country where if you drive 30 miles, Brad has a different name.

Toby Ricketts

Some of the people, the opposite ends cannot even understand each

Ray Porter

other. No, that's absolutely true. Absolutely true. You know, are we talking west country now? Or you know, and were in the West Country? How long counties? Scots, you know, very In Scots is very different. Just in Scotland. I mean, you got, you know, on this coast, west coast Highlands. Totally. And then the guys from Inverness who sound almost American, they sound like an American doing a light Scottish accent a lot of people from Inverness, you know, and they're like, you're not from Scotland? Yeah. I'm from Inverness, as Scottish as it possibly can be. Yeah, you

Toby Ricketts

know? And do you have resources? How do you how do you do you study accents for certain roles? And and how do you go about that?

Ray Porter

I, you know, weirdly, I do study a lot of American regionalisms. And there are some that I find unbelievably hard. Try Philadelphia sometime.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, that's a good one. Isn't that? Yeah. So you'd like that the East Coast, like kind of halfway down in the middle. They're like buying Washington. There's all this like, as soon as it gets into mountains, there seems to be a lot of crazy stuff goes on.

Ray Porter

Well, yeah. Cuz a lot of it, you know, up until fairly recently was closed off from the rest of the world. But you know, like, like I said, Try Philadelphia. Alright, you've tried Philadelphia, congratulations. Try Bucks County. Totally different sound. And it's the same state. Yeah. So within that, this is going to sound like such a cop out probably is I'm a lazy bastard. What can I say? I have found that you will sound more accurate when doing either a language or a dialect. If you're incredibly sloppy with it.

Toby Ricketts

I think that's true. I've taught people that with accents. You've got to kind of learn the accent and then just relax into it. And like people with a certain accent don't they're not they're not actually conforming toward the like, we're all kind of a bit a bit rough around the edges.

Ray Porter

being different. Yeah. Every every human. I mean, I have. I just came back from England and I've got a lot of friends over there from all over the country. Do you know what I mean? It runs off us. And you sound real different. I can tell you've been living in New Zealand for a while.

Toby Ricketts

Suddenly. Yeah, but it's in New Zealand is that like, gosh, you sound a little bit British. No, of course. Of course. It's

Ray Porter

I knew a woman who was Glaswegian, who lived in the States for three years and her friends back home started calling her the Yank. Because she sounded American to them. I can't tell you how many people in England that don't know me. You know, I just happened there was a woman on the street in Hartfordshire. Who was like, you will foreign? Yes, I am. Where are you from? My friend said where do you think? And she said, Australia. I was like, no, she went South Africa. Canada? No. I'm from the US. Oh. So I think that there's when you focus precisely on a dialect when you focus precisely on a voice or something like that, it's going to take everything out of the story. It takes the story out of the story takes the audience out of the story takes you out of the story while you sit there turning wrenches when the whole point is the damn story tell the story Yeah, bring the character well I have I have found that less is more for sure. That being said, you know you have to be very careful about things like you know where where would this British character make an R sound rather than an ass sound? You know with the word you know that sort of thing? Yeah. I do. YouTube is a fantastic resource for dialects you know you just can't look specifically for the dialect Don't ever do that you know West Country dialect into YouTube and you'll get some very well meaning educator who will say you know, if you want to do a good West Country dialect, harden your Rs Well no, if you want to really great West Country dialect watchtime team a big blonde hairy dude who's an archaeologist has a fantastic Somerset dialect. Yeah. Pick him up pick them up where you can I mean, the great thing about living in a city like Los Angeles is I'm constantly bending my ears to the way people sound you know?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, tourist towns and good like that. You can just sit on towns are brilliant that way and and like eavesdrop? Yeah, or um, the other thing, fun thing to do is like find someone who's got an interesting accent to follow them around for a bit, listen to what they say. And then you start you go around and be that person for little bit in that environment and like force yourself to to just go out with that accent. It's not full immersion.

Ray Porter

full immersion is the only way but also, you know, I love hearing them. But then I have to remember this thing. There's a great in Saving Private Ryan. There's that moment between Tom and will Matt Damon where they're sitting there and Matt Damon tells that of what I heard was completely improv story about his two brothers who had been killed. Obviously, we know this in the movie by now. And then he says, I can't remember their faces, I can't remember their faces. I'm thinking and I can't remember their faces. And Tom Hanks, his character says you have to put them in a context. You have to put them in a context, don't try to think about their face, think about what they were doing at a certain time, or remember them. Remember the time that you guys all did this thing, and then you'll see their faces. And that's absolutely true, I believe. And I think the same is true for recalling voices and or dialects put it in a context can be very, very helpful as far as recall, you know, a physical segment

Toby Ricketts

where you hold it in your mouth and your posture. Like yeah, yeah. With characters really. It's really

Ray Porter

Yeah, yeah. Like, I knew a guy I knew a guy who was from Wellington and had lived in America for a long time. So there's this strange kind of mishmash, you know, not everybody sounds like Jacinda. Ya know, as much as I'd like to have her running things here. She's not everybody sounds like her, you know, and the same is true in England. Right? I mean, you know, you sound different from Simon Vance, from dirt mags to from all of my friends, you know, because everybody sounds fundamentally different. I don't know where my dialect is from. I can hear a fair amount of Midwest in it. But that's just for right now. Sometimes there's east coast, and it seems, you know, the it's all these little influences, which makes it all pretty much of a mess. So I say, play the mess.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. It's a spectrum.

Ray Porter

I love the slice. Yeah. Don't have to be precise. And if you are, it'll sound artificial. Yeah, yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Well, fantastic. Well, you have I've taken up so much of your valuable time. I know, but very pleasant. To be very fun. We haven't even talked about whiskey yet, but I'm sure we can

Ray Porter

all enjoy whiskey podcast.

Toby Ricketts

It's a good question. If we serve and whiskey podcast,

Ray Porter

you should do you should do that. To actors talk and slowly get pissed.

Toby Ricketts

Yes. Well, maybe we could make that happen one day.

Ray Porter

Yeah, we gotta get Vance in here for that. Absolutely. Yeah.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, well, maybe I should just come to the next time I'm in LA, we'll just get down. It's one.

Ray Porter

We'll just have a massive piss up. That'll be brilliant. And you can tell people about it later.

Toby Ricketts

We kind of touched upon my last question, which is, which has to do with like, you know, newbies, people wanting to get into the industry. People love listening to audiobooks, and they're like, I really I just want to do this. I love reading books. I feel like I'm good at characters. What do you say to them? Like how to do the work and how to get the work? Do you have any formed opinions? So it's obviously a very different time from when you started. But he's very different. Now. Do you see any avenues that you would recommend to people who are on that journey? Well,

Ray Porter

there's there's a variety of avenues. I mean, I know that ACX has been very good for a lot of people. It's not been great for some others. So I really can't speak to that. Obviously, just like, you know, being an actor, there's no substitute for acting. You know, somebody's like, I want to be an actress, like, great, go do a play. What do you mean, there's a play happening in a church basement within 15 miles of you, I guarantee it, go do it. You know, the same is true, I think with narration. The more you narrate, the better you'll get, the more comfortable you'll be with it. You know, that sort of thing. And eventually, it'll happen. Yes, sometimes the process would make you want to prescribe riddle into a glacier. It's a lot slower than any of us would like, but it will happen. The one big pitfall that I always bring up with people who wants to narrate audiobooks is you know, I'll say, Go on Audible. Listen to as wide a variety of people as you possibly can to get a sense of what they do. But for God's sakes, do not do an audiobook thinking about what you should sound like. You will get work as you the narrator, not you the sum, total conglomeration of all the popular narrators in the world. Don't try to sound like me. Don't try to sound like brick. Don't try to sound like Vance. Don't try to sound like Hilary Huber, or Aaron Bennett or xe sands or any of these other narrators who you'll see getting awards all the time, Bonnie Turpin, and you know, there's so many incredibly talented people out there. And the one thing that I can say is true about all of them is that they above all sound like them. They don't sound like other narrators. So, you know, anytime you start thinking about what you should sound like you're not doing the work.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah, same for commercial So, so many people who come and say, I've got a great voice. And it's like, that's not your voice though. Is it?

Ray Porter

Me, I want to I want to take one of your classes because I can't get arrested on commercial voiceover. I can't. I do all these audiobooks, and you know, all this on screen stuff. And I, for some reason, yeah. You know, so. And I've started to I have started because, you know, in the last few years, I realized that I was doing exactly what I said not to do with audiobooks. And I was like, What should I sound like? As opposed to,

you know, fuck it, I'm gonna just sound like me. But it's tough. It's very hard. Well, let you know,

Toby Ricketts

we'll continue that conversation after the interview, because I don't see why you shouldn't you're definitely talented enough, so it's just an access thing. So yeah, well, and but it's, you know,

Ray Porter

if you want to start out doing audiobooks, I mean, obviously, it's a very, very, very busy field right now. So I would say that the place where to go that has, you know, copy that's like ready to go and, and wants recordings of it to start with would be ACX. They're a great clearinghouse for this kind of stuff. They're fantastic. Obviously, have some decent business sense about yourself, so that you do get paid for your work. There's been some horror stories about scams on ACX. You know, yeah, where people just disappear or whatever. So you know, be an adult about it. Don't think about what you should sound like. And don't take anybody's advice that is telling you to buy 1000s of dollars worth of gear, you don't need it right now. Get yourself a good microphone, that's going to probably not be a USB mic. Get a decent microphone, get a decent interface. And used to you don't have to buy new, go on Craigslist, go on gum tree, you know, or whatever the clearing house is, wherever you live. And just get yourself enough gear and a decent environment to record in and then just dammit, start recording, and start narrating.

Toby Ricketts

I wonder if there's an avenue for like peep. There's lots of people who want to be authors, their writing, they've just written their first novel, they haven't gotten a show of actually getting audible studios to pick it up. But like, if you could if there are groups on Facebook of like, of novice authors who want this, like you could both grow up together like that might be an ad

Ray Porter

Could you Could I do see it often in the audiobooks subreddit, where someone will be like, I've just written this thing, or this is my first narration, you know, give it a listen. I don't know what kind of success that has really. I do know that there's a plethora of people on ACX who are like, Hey, I've got you know, this 250 pager and it's not published yet, but I'd love to have it in audio. You know, that sort of thing. The works there. You got to do a little bit of digging before it starts coming to you. But it it is there. Yeah, yeah. So. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

very nice. Well, thank you so much for your time today. Is there anything we haven't covered that you you wanted to cover? Uh

Ray Porter

huh. No, I can't think so. I do think it's really vitally important for anybody who's starting out to grow a beard and long hair.

Toby Ricketts

Absolutely. Yep. Guarantee big, big top tip.

Ray Porter

You heard it here first.

Toby Ricketts

Well, we're gonna send over descender to run in the 2024 presidential leg. Thank

Ray Porter

you. She gets my vote immediately. What are you guys gonna do though?

Toby Ricketts

I don't know. There'll be there'll be someone else I'm sure even even most right even though most right leaning politician is still well left of center in the States, I'm sure.

Ray Porter

Oh, God mate Yes. You know. Yeah, I'm I'm I on those visas hard like, you know, I'm just gonna come over there and declare asylum. Yeah. Become an asylum seeker in New Zealand.

Toby Ricketts

Fantastic. Thank you so much for your time today report. It's been great to have you on the show.

Ray Porter

An absolute pleasure. Thanks, man.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Interview with 'The Nethervoice' - Paul Strikwerda

Paul Strikwerda AKA The Nethervoice, has decades of experience in broadcasting and voiceover.
His Blog is one of the most read and subscribed-to Voiceover resources on the internet.

Toby Ricketts and Paul chat about many things, including;
His journey into the world of voiceover
How he started blogging and what benefit that has for his voice work
Whether he voices in different accents or languages
The best way for beginner Vos to start in the industry
Why it is important to stand out
The story of his stroke and recovery from it
His thoughts on work / life balance
His opinion of Gravy for the Brain as a company
Voiceover business tips
Why passion in your craft is important
How welcoming and supportive the VO industry is
Technology in the studio, including microphones
His book “Making money in your PJs”
His new book

Stick around until the end of the video for a very generous offer from Paul…
More VO LIFE Interviews in the series: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLZQTBMxKbs3E8C9VwatGYFjHo0wpoAGfK

You can find more info at www.nethervoice.com & Gravy for the brain Oceania: http://oceania.gravyforthebrain.com

Toby Ricketts

Welcome to vo life. My name is Toby Ricketts from gravy for the brain, Oceania. And on this video podcast we talk to the big people in the world of voiceover and entertainment really we've we've had agents, we've had voices. We've had all kinds of people on the podcast movers and shakers. And today's guests certainly does move and shake a lot on the internet, that's for sure. It's Paul Strikwerda. Be very afraid. How are you there? It's very early where you are.

Paul Strikwerda

It is 5am. But I think we should start off by wishing Mel Blanc a very happy birthday. Birthday today.

Unknown Speaker

Very good. How appropriate.

Paul Strikwerda

I was called by Dutch national radio a couple of hours ago. They have a morning show. And they wanted to talk about Mel Blanc. And I said, Why do you want to talk about Mel Blanc today? Was it don't you know said I don't know what? Well, it's his birthday. You should know your voice over? Who is Mel Blanc and why? Why should we talk about involves you called me. And he? He died 33 years ago. But it's pretty amazing. That 33 years later, people in the Netherlands still remember him and want me to talk about him, which is phenomenal.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, it's a testament to sort of like what kind of like how voice artists can touch people really, you know, they can like the voices of all of these characters that they know and love. And it's still like the same these days. We've got videogame characters who just like they'll do one character and then go on, you know, tours for for years on the back of that passion that the fans have.

Paul Strikwerda

I think it's always fascinating. If you stop some people in the street and say, Can you name five Hollywood actors? I think they can rattle them off straightaway, you know, five popular actors. But when you ask them to name one voice actor, there's probably one voice one name that comes up and that's probably Mel Blanc and O'Donnell Fondriest I will draw a blank. That's, that's part of our professional that we're kind of the anonymous disembodied voices that people hear. But they'll know who we are and what we do and stuff like that. But I think it's a big tribute to Mel Blanc. And they asked me, Why do you think he's so popular? I said, Who doesn't love cartoons? You know, you can love or hate your favorite movie star. There's this big Johnny Depp thing going on at the moment of our recording. And some people love him. Some people hate him. But I have never met somebody who hates Mel Blanc are the characters that he voices. So that's pretty unique. And I think there's also a wonderful that we can enjoy someone like malbranque with different generations because I have a daughter, she's 19 I'm 58 my father in law who is 90 years old who lives with us and our favorite pastime together three generations is to watch Looney Tune cartoons. It's all Mel Blanc. That's phenomenal.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Without his voice in there, like those characters just wouldn't have been

Paul Strikwerda

told the interview yesterday. Now. Just imagine watching like Daffy Duck or even Tom and Jerry or Woody Woodpecker. Roadrunner, all his classic cartoons. Turn the sound on, you can't hear anything. What's left of it? It's just images. And it's really it's, it's nothing's left to it. It's not even funny. Yeah. And in those days, I mean, I know you wanted to talk about me. But I think Mel Blanc is more interesting. So let's make this interview of belflex Sorry, people

Toby Ricketts

smell blanks journey through life. To talk more about your journey, of course, people might know you as the nether voice. That's your big your website. You're a prolific blogger and social media, right? So do you want to tell us about like your journey into voice acting, because you've got some sort of strong opinions on sort of, like, you know, training and how people get into voiceover. But how did you

Paul Strikwerda

struggle? gets me into trouble. You're trying to get me into trouble. Every time I voice a strong opinion. I got a big backlash. So let's do it all over again. I think I started like a lot of voice actors did because as a child, I love to imitate people. And that got me into trouble too. Because the first instance that I can remember me imitating somebody rather successfully was the first year of elementary school. And we had a teacher with a very weird voice. So to talk a little bit like Julia Child's, but her name was Mrs. drinkers drinkers. And drunken in Dutch means in Hebrew, ate it drunk, drunk was drunk. So I talked like this. And they said, Well, to me, she sounds like she's only drunk, not knowing that she was just about to come into the classroom, and she said Mr. Strickland, in the corner with you, You troublemaker. And what she did was something that people couldn't do these days anymore, but she took it took a big bandaid, put it over my mouth and I had to stand in The corner for 404 for an hour or so, and everybody laughed at me. Oh, Paul was silly voices. That's my first first appearance, I think, is a voice actor. And it didn't deter me. And I and I, my father was a minister. And I loved imitating him on his pulpit. And he didn't like it either. But nevertheless, I persisted. And I kept on doing that, because I think there's something so fascinating about the voice of voice. It's like a fingerprint. It's completely unique. And I remember doing these, what do you call them? That I was my father and I had this when we were building models. In the days, I'm dating myself now, where models weren't these nice plastic elaborate things that you glue together. But they're a made of cardboard, cardboard, so you had to cut them up and put them together. So I had a whole village of models in my bedroom, put on the shelf, and I invited my family around of the bed, and I had a flashlight and I put the light on the different models. And I started telling the story with about the people living in those houses of what they would sound like what their lives were like. And later on, I did radio plays with an old tape recorder and old Phillips cassette recorder. And I had lots of instruments because also love music and play different instruments, instruments aligned around me for the sound effects. And I have read stories like King Arthur and the Black Knight, or the five or all these famous kids books that reenact them all by me, directed by me voices by Paul stricker voice characterization, as they would say, with Mel Blanc, and all the sound effects. I think that's how I got my start. Now fast forward, the small boy grows up. And it was 17 years old, I was studying musicology are four things in in Holland. And one of my best friends had an uncle who was in the radio business. He was a news and current affairs presenter and he said, My radio station is holding a contest for young kids who want to be involved in youth radio. And then, as sort of a joke of the party, all our friends said, You know what we're going to all apply and properly, nothing will come out of it. But it could be fun, you know, because I was always fascinated by radio voices. And I want to have a look behind the scenes. So if this is an opportunity for me, and maybe I could work for the Costco music department, being a musicologist and stuff like that. So I applied and, much to my surprise, they hired me on the spot to start doing youth radio programs. And one of the benefits was that I was mentored by the people who were the veterans in the business to people that I had grown up with. And it wasn't only radio, it was television, as well. So as of age 17, I was a voice on Dutch radio and later face on Dutch television, can't believe it, this face, but they they wanted me. But later on, we decided that I had a better face for radio, of course. But that's, that's how I got my semi professional start. And then I had another big break, because at that time, the Dutch Army still was was Russia, we had an army of conscripts. I think that's what you call it. And so I had to go, but I didn't feel like going to the army because I'm not a big fan of shooting people with guns. And I became a conscientious objector. So instead, I had to do social service, which is fine by me. And I found a radio and television company that was enlisting. People who wanted to do social service by working for radio and television station isn't that great?

When it was my time to go into the army, I did my social service at that radio and television station. So that gave me another two years of a full time professional experience to do all kinds of things, producing presenting being a roaming reporter every aspect of the radio and television business. And after that, I got myself a free vacation, courtesy of the state of the Netherlands. And I loved it so much that I flunked out of musicology. And I said, this is what I want to do with my life, and it would be in radio. And so that really became the start of it later. Was my voiceover career.

Toby Ricketts

Was there any point like a lot of people where you would sort of doing voice work on the side or it wasn't making up like a majority of your income, and then you thought, like, there's a leap of faith that happens with every voice artist, I think when you get to the point, like it's done as a hobby for enough time, and you think I really want to make a go of this on it, but I don't have the time to apply to it. So you think Well, I'm just gonna do it for six months and see what happens. Was there was there a point at which you reached with that?

Paul Strikwerda

You know, I was done with the whole radio and TV business by the age. I was 38 because I was working in the news and current affairs department. And you know, in most news is not good news. Unfortunately, that's why it's new. Who's and it kind of sickening to have to deal with that every day. So I decided to take a break from broadcasting and got a training as an NLP practitioner that stands for Neuro Linguistic Programming or neuro linguistic psychology. It's the stuff that guys like Tony Robbins teach, you know, you gotta believe in yourself, it's all about changing your mind change your life and helping others to change their mind and their lives as well, which was incredibly powerful, empowering, powerful stuff. And I became a trainer in that methodology. And I was invited by training institute in the United States to become one of the lead teachers. So I made it, my first leap of faith was leaving the Netherlands behind my friends or my family, packing my bags and moving to the United States of America, then joining an institute there. Now, the person who was running the institute that said it was very successful, which in fact, it was not. So while I was there, there wasn't as much work as they said they would offer me and I had to do something on the side of this, you know, this this, I've always loved working with my voice. So let's see if I can do something with my voice and I found an ad in the paper. And as said Mike Lemmon casting Philadelphia is having an open casting call. So well, this could be my opportunity to fame and fortune. I knocked on the door of Mike Levin casting, and Mike Lemmon was the big guy behind the moves of M Night Shyamalan, like the six cents with Haley Joel Osment, when he says I see. Remember that movie. And he's been casting them ever since. So he was a big name in our area. And when I opened the door of his casting agency, there were about 1000 people in the hallway. They all thought they were the next best thing since sliced bread. But most of them are like, like ventriloquist and jugglers and ballet dancers and singers. And there was only one guy who thought he could do voiceovers and it was me. So they looked at my application and said, Oh, voiceover we only have one VoiceOver so I was sent straight to the voiceover director. We had tea and scones and the lovely conversation and she started directing me Give me a few scripts. And she noticed immediately that I know knew how to work a microphone know how to interpret a script, do different voices characters, and she said, You know what, I want you to meet Mike Lemmon. So I did and he worked with me. And they hired me on the spot, basically, because there was no one else I think, but they said, You know, Paul, you sound like unlike anybody else we have in our database of voices because you have this weird European thing going on. And at that time, this was mind you about 23 years ago now. I sounded very British because that's how the Dutch children learn their English, the Queen's English. So sounded like a stuffy Professor all the time is when we whenever we need a stuffy English professor, kind of Attenborough type of guy, URL, man. And that's how I started I started by imitating I think now for a very bad British accent that Americans don't know what accent from the other anyway, so they hired me. And I was hired. I remember my first job was for Hershey parks, which is a big theme park, you know, Hershey chocolates, the most awful chocolates in the world. But nevermind, I they have a theme park like Disney World. It's all about chocolate, of course. And right. And it was the voice of one of the rights that led to many other things. But back to your question five minutes later. interrupt me when when you need to. Okay, please, because I have a tendency to go very on and on even that coffee. But I, I did not quite believe in myself. Because I'm Dutch, just this unknown Dutch guy in the United States. And in Holland, it's very easy to be famous, because there's only 16 or 17 million people in the Netherlands. That's it? Yeah. So in Holland, most people knew who I was. But in the United States, this 250 or 60, or 70 million people there. And nobody knew who I was. Nobody had ever heard of me. Nobody cared, ready. And I, these were in the days where we didn't really have social media. I didn't have website, I had one agent. And just, I didn't want to sit by the phone all the time waiting for the agent to call for another thing. So I wasn't sure whether I could do this or pull this off. And we didn't have home studios either. So it was more of a wait and see game. But then this whole arrangement with the training company, for whom I was going to train people to become NLP practitioners wasn't working out very much. I said, Well, I got to do something on the side, at least to get by. Because otherwise, I might as well go back to Holland. And at that time,

I was in a romantic relationship in the United States. And I didn't want to go back to Holland. So I had to make a choice and said, What am I going to do? I'm going to take this seriously, or will I stay an amateur forever and keep it as a hobby. And some people still think that I should have kept it as a hobby. But I decided note and I'm gonna give this a go. And then my I started my whole publicity campaign all around the nether voice that voice of the Netherlands Paul stricker Look at, look at us now we're talking about it. I'm talking to somebody in New Zealand for things, working for a company called gravy for the brain.

Unknown Speaker

Who thought that crazy idea?

Paul Strikwerda

You got to be crazy to be in this business, don't you? You do,

Toby Ricketts

you've got to kind of I mean, I think your things is exactly right about standing out. Like, there's definitely something to be said for like, the thing that gets you the foot in the door. For me, obviously, like the fact that I was like, I mean, you know, I'm in New Zealand, I'm in the middle of nowhere and rural New Zealand. And that is a good enough reason to give agents a call, because they're like, Wow, that's different. That's, that's kind of, let's get this guy out, you know. And then if you have the talent to back that up, it's gotten you in the door. So it looks like that's definitely worked for me. So I often tell people, it's like, you have to find that that part of yourself that people find like interesting, like an odd stone on the beach, or whatever. And I'm, that's definitely interesting

Paul Strikwerda

students is, you know, what's normal for you, is probably special for someone else. And you don't recognize it, because it's normal. That's why I need someone else to recognize that. And I got a hint, in my short and unglamorous career as a waiter. Yes, I've been a waiter in the United States as well to make ends meet. And frankly, I didn't have a don't tell them what I didn't have a work permit at that time. So and it took years to become a US citizen. And when I finally applied we had 911 and then it took even longer because they didn't want all this foreigners in the country. So I had to do something to make a couple of bucks and I became a waiter. And people love me for some reason because not because who I am but because of the way I sounded. And we had this game where they the the people I was waiting on had to guess where it was frameless if you guess one from our by a free dessert. And, and I did waiting on the side for about two years, which was another life lesson I will eagerly forget. But it was fun too, because you have lots of different people in your restaurant, lots of different personalities, lots of different accent and you learn how to sell stuff, you know, when the kitchen says can you push dish triode free, we need to sell the the chicken today. And so I could talk people into ordering dishes and buying basically more from me than they were willing to spend. So it was an education and selling. And so I am losing my train of soccer wagering making money in United States accents. Getting a work permit helped me out again.

Toby Ricketts

Well, I guess we could fast forward into because I was next thing I was gonna ask you is about like, where? Because you're in the United States. Now. How much of your work? You know, do you are you doing for United States companies? How much is back in Europe? And like, Where does this work come from? It's like, you're kind of all about self generated work. And agents probably come into it as well cuz I know you're represented. And whether you fish in the ptps or not. Occasionally, a fiver maybe?

Paul Strikwerda

Is fiber. Yes. Don't say the word Fiverr. Well, I dabble here on deck because that's one thing. You can't put all your eggs in a basket. Absolutely. in one basket. That's that's never gonna work. And I became a freelancer to be free to be an independent contractor. So I've always been a freelancer by the way, from the very moment I started in radio, I was my one man business. So I had learned how to to drum up my business and to stand out a little bit, if you will. So I have about 12 agents, most of whom I never hear from. And when they when they when they do it, they usually think I'm like Holland and Poland. They think Holland and Poland are the same sort of idea. He Polish scripts, or Pennsylvania Dutch scripts. Boy, you're Dutch. You live in Pennsylvania. So you must be Pennsylvania Dutch. So let's do this in German, German accent and I still can't do it. But so you know, I cannot rely on these things. And to everybody who's watching at the beginning of his or her career. Some people may say, well, once you've got an agent, you have landed and it's true. They gave me my first break. But that will dry out at some point. You cannot rely on your agents because if you do that, then you're pretty much doomed. The only person you can rely on is you know, my wife has this wonderful tile next to her desk it says behind every strong woman is herself which is nice because they say you have behind every strong man is his wife or a woman or something like that. But she says behind every strong moment is herself. I think the hide every strong VoiceOver is him or herself, it's gotta be you, the buck stops where you are, you gotta make a lot of noise, otherwise people won't hear you. It's the whole deal is you're a needle in a ginormous haystack. And what you need to do is make that needle as sharp and shiny as possible, so that you become hard to ignore. And that's what I set out to do. Maybe arrogant at the time, but you know, I had nothing to lose. So I thought, somebody told me that I have a very unique accent. I'm going to leverage that accent, I'm going to make use of that. So I labeled myself I marketed myself as the ultimate European voice was very boisterous, because Holland, the Dutch people are very modest. You don't talk about yourself. So I had to learn how to talk myself up in public,

Unknown Speaker

America is a pretty good place to learn that.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh, my gosh, the United States. That was the hardest thing for me, because everybody said, Paul, Tony, down, I have to tell my Dutch colleagues also, you know, you got to get out of your shell, sell yourself, otherwise, you will not you won't be noticed. Yeah, but what people wear if people think I'm so arrogant, no, no, you're not arrogant. You're just proud of your accomplishments that we need to rephrase the way you think about yourself, the way you sell yourself.

Toby Ricketts

We call that tall poppy syndrome. You know, where the tall poppy is get cut off? Yeah, exactly. True.

Paul Strikwerda

Yeah. So. So I had to learn that. And one of the first things I did was a built a website, I'm not a website builder. So if you would look at my first website today,

you would just pass me by because it was very bare bones. And the only thing that I did that was different at the time was I started blogging. And I always loved to write and stood first started as notes to self really, because I didn't know who I was blogging for writing to if anybody would be interested. But apart from a weird accent, that's something that I think I'm rather good at. So I started documenting my journey. And then, thank goodness, social media started and became a member of a couple of groups. I don't even know if Facebook had started at that time. But there were a couple of groups on the interweb, or about voiceovers, and I started posting links to my blog, and some people read my stuff and commented favorably on it and thought, you know, maybe I'm onto something here. And I've been doing that for the past 1718 years now. And it's grown and grown and grown and grown. And today, I can say that my blog is the landing page of my website, and the single source for my notoriety, if you will. One thing that the Dutch have in common is that they don't mince their words. They're very, they're known throughout the world as being rather blunt. Because they're honest, they don't want to be nasty or rude, but they're just honest. And they like to share their opinion and everybody's got an opinion in Holland and they're not afraid to share that with you. And I didn't know that was made me different because I was just writing as me being blunt about the industry about the the setbacks and all the empty promises that were being made and all these people that pretend that there's something and they're not and you know, there's so much humbug going on and hot air that a lot of Emperor's without clothes. And I thought it was my, my service to the community of voiceovers to expose these embers will have closed and all the hot air that was going on, including hot air about me because I was trying not to take myself too seriously. But somehow, that took off, and I got myself a name. But what this does is once your blog gets a regular amount of viewers, it gets noticed by the Yahoos and the Googles in the world to say, hey, this somebody who does something relevant, apparently something that's interesting, and that people want to check out again and again and again. And again. Because the problem is most websites is that voiceover websites, I mean, is that they're the same. Every day, every month, every year, I had some people that I worked with voice actor websites a lot in there. And they build the greatest websites for voice actors. And once they build a website, then five years later, they get a call and say can you please design another website for you? Because mine is not working? Or why isn't working? Well, nobody's coming? Why is nobody coming? Well, because you didn't change anything. Why would people come back once they visited your site? It's like fish in a fish market here. If you don't change it, it starts to rot. Nobody wants to nobody wants to come back. So that's the great thing. A blogged us if it's done well, I think if it's interesting, you got to be interesting for people to be interested. So every week consistently through thick and thin. And then for better or worse in sickness and health, I've been writing this blog. I'm married to it, as you can tell. And every week, to my astonishment, still, people are coming back for more. And that has given me what they call a domain authority Domain Authority is a number between zero and 100 indicates how popular your website is based on the number of backlinks. Whenever somebody links to your story, it means that they pass it on to another website, and then to another website, another website, because it's an indicator for Google to say that people liked this stuff, they'd like to share it. And my website is one of the most shared websites, especially the blog articles in the voice of community. In fact, Joe Davis a couple of years ago, Joe Davis is the man behind voice actor websites, and he is an analytics guy. He is all about SEO, search engine optimization. He said, Paul, I just ran a search. And I found out that your website is the single most popular individual voice over website in the entire world is what how did that happen? Why said it's all about your blog, man. It's all about the blog, the single most visited individual website, it's not like a lack of voice 123 Are the other big ones that I shall name because they've got millions of visitors, I can never compete with that. But that that impressed me greatly. And that tells you something because I never set out to become the best or the most popular blog or the most visited website. It's never voice.com By the way, if you've never visited Nether voice.com new blog every week.

But that's the power of of social media. And here's the side effect. And now I'm finally coming to the answer to your question. When your website becomes popular, what happens when people type in a search for Dutch voiceover or European source or voiceover, or neutral English voiceover My name comes up in the top 10 On the first couple of pages. And that's how clients find me. So I tell people, you attract clients, you have to become a magnet yourself instead of chasing clients have clients chase you. And all things on my blog. I think that's what's happened that people find my, my, my website, my blog, they start reading, they start listening to the daily demos, and they end up hiring me for some reason.

Toby Ricketts

I mean, and that's what Google is noticing, like you mentioned, SEO and I went on a really big SEO journey from about three years ago. And made improvements like it's all about content now. And it's got to be content that people have to find interesting. Like, it can't just be pages of you know, nothing speak or voiceover repeated a million times. Like it's got to be evolving, changing multimedia backlinks, as you say, and Google takes it all into account. And the more you can, like, I'd say that you know people with with with other websites, the more relevant you can make yourself to someone, like wanting to find a voice or find out about voiceover, then like, the more the better success you're going to have, because that's what's Google is trying to intelligently do is find out the best answer for people. If you can be the answer, then it's brilliant. So you mentioned social media towards the end there in terms of you know, how that stuff has spread. And you're very visible on social media on Twitter, all of the sort of the big things, commenting on things all the time. I don't know how you find the time of the day to do

Paul Strikwerda

it. I kind of keep my big mouth.

Toby Ricketts

It's a valid marketing strategy to, you know, be doing little videos every day, I see people on LinkedIn and on Instagram and stuff doing these live videos in the studio today. I'm starting to do a bit more of it. But do you think social media didn't the blogging is more important than the social media stuff? Or do you need both these days?

Paul Strikwerda

I definitely need both. Because if you make a lot of noise, and nobody hears that you don't exist. So I make noise, and then it makes sure everybody hears using social media. Is it a good strategy? Well, yes or no, it really depends on how you use it. And I still have to discover the world of videos because I know that on Instagram, and I'm very active on Instagram reels, the videos are short videos like tick tock, they're all the thing you know that they get preferential treatment. So one of the things that I really should do, is become more proficient at producing videos, but it's much easier to write a piece of 2000 words than to produce a minute a video,

Toby Ricketts

I think the opposite is the I think the complete if it would take me days to write 2000 words, it would take me about six minutes to do a video. So maybe we could swap stories sometimes.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh yeah, you got to play your strengths. That's true. It's different for different people. And so, but that's one aspect of myself and my social media exposure that I have yet to explore. Unfortunately, I moved to the Northeast Kingdom in Vermont lately. I've been here since November 5. And it's this outpost of America five miles from the Canadian border where nothing ever happens. And I like to keep it that way. But the nature is stunning. So I started posting little nature, pictures of where I live and what I know and what I do. And people seem to like that. So maybe I could become the pole strip reader of Vermont now of narrating my own nature, nature videos, you the data back from them from a golf, I can do that. But you know what to tell what I tell my students because I have a few students here and there. And I call it well, the coaching that I do is I help people to stand out as a as a voiceover become that shiny needle in the haystack, right? I tell people, you know, what you should start doing first is do what you love already doing. So for me, my love was writing for other people could be photography, some people, it's videography. Some people like to draw cartoons, but do something that you love, because it won't take as much time and will give you pleasure. And when you are finding pleasure in something it shows and people hear it in your voice. So do what you love to do and make a mock that way. create yourself an audience, and then you can drag themselves into the world of voiceovers as well. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

it gives you energy. I think that's the key thing like I find with you know, if you do something that you love, everyday like voiceover, it gives you energy to do other things. And then like it's it's self sustaining in a way, whereas it doesn't take your attempts to keep doing it. Yes,

Paul Strikwerda

yes, yes. Because because it's such a crazy, it's such a crazy business that we're in really the uncertainty with a variety as well, you know, with uncertainty comes the variety as well, because you never know what tomorrow will bring. If it even brings anything and sometimes, you know, I don't know what to do, because I have weeks where nothing happens. Really don't you ask? You asked me Oh, how do you produce all that content? When you see me producing a lot of content, usually nothing happens. Paul is trying to desperately stay busy.

Toby Ricketts

It's very true. Like I I've, I've learned to embrace I used to get really nervous as a sub subcontractor or an independent contractor. When you have those quiet weeks and you think, Oh, well, that's it, maybe the dream is over and you get the imposter syndrome and you think, Oh, that's it. That's it career's over, I'll define the end of the week at the supermarket. But I've really learned always comes back it's always goes back and it comes back with a vengeance usually. So now I really enjoy those weeks where I have no work and I'm just like, now I can catch up on this stuff I can do this stuff I've been meaning to do. And it's like, you know, as a as an independent contractor, you don't get you know, four weeks of paid leave a year. So you kind of make that your paid leave in a way so you know, it's I've learned

Paul Strikwerda

to embrace ridiculous thing about living in the United States where it's all about work, work, work, work, work, and I'm a European, I'm used to at least six weeks of summer holidays, vacations, as they say, Here are six to eight weeks, the Americans have what you leave work for more than two weeks, and you don't leave your phone number and email address with your employer. He doesn't get in touch with you, you don't get in touch with your business. What ways that to conduct a business you always have to be able to be reached and called upon said no, no, no, my vacation that's preventative health care. When I want to take off, I'm not taking any voiceover kits with me, no travel gets nothing. I want to be there for my family and myself to recharge the batteries. Because if I don't, then I'll go crazy. So this whole thing about work, work work. Always being available. I don't buy into that at all, I'm telling you. It's such a relief, because I started doing that after I had my stroke three years ago. And that was an eye opening experience because I was one of those people who's always chasing his dream and client after client and the more I did, the better I felt about myself and I said your I don't want my self image to be linked by what I do. What I do is just an aspect of who I am and who I am is more important than what I do. So I really was working around the clock I was in my studio. And I tell the story a lot but I'll keep it short but I was in the studio and I woke up on the floor of a studio and I was partially paralyzed and I had never experienced anything like that I had a terrible headache and and I could barely speak could lose part of my face was paralyzed. And I recognized this because I'm having a stroke but it was by myself in the home in my soundproof studio I said this is the end it's desert I'm waiting I was waiting for the tunnel and the light to show up and didn't unfortunately but said this is this time to meet my maker because I was thought I was gonna die. And obviously I didn't die I'm still here. But to cut a long, long story short, I was supposed to be at a meeting and my wife is expecting me she got a bad feeling and she asked a local police force to do a welfare check on me and they found me

Toby Ricketts

wow that's because the door inward isn't that right so you couldn't like actually get another reading a blog at the time.

Paul Strikwerda

I was leaning against the door it was just The ordeal to get it open and get me out. I was almost suffocating because I didn't have any ventilation in the room. Yes, very smart. Always have a studio with ventilation people because it might not end up well for you. But, you know, it took me about a year to get back to me, milk itself itself was a little bit weird and strange. And but you know, I decided I looked at life. And so you know, it's also relative or called fame and working for big clients and building a name for yourself. What's gonna be left at the end of the day, it was worth it. What's it worth is worth dying for the studio on the floor and gas struck for? And I certainly know, forget it, forget it, I don't want that. I'm no longer going to chase clients let them do the hard work.

Toby Ricketts

It's interesting, because when I remember when I read that blog, it was of special interest because I'm one of the things I do in my spare time is I'm a volunteer ambulance officer at the local ambulance center. So I go out and calls and I've, you know, gone to people with strokes and stuff. So I was reading it, I was kind of like fascinated about being a voiceover and that whole thing of the booth and like how that all worked and stuff, but you're so right that like when you're confronted with those life and death situations, even if it's vicarious, and you're just sort of present, you do have this whole, it just shifts you into this other level, this top down view. And you're like, what's really important, like, you know, it's really it's really refreshing and like things like I always wear my seatbelt, no matter how short the drivers because you just see things like you know, people didn't read the seatbelts. And it's just like that tiny little action makes a huge difference. And just like having your cell phone on you all the time. Like you're saying the booth you could dial or something. So it's yeah, that was a very interesting article. And it

Paul Strikwerda

was. So it's, yeah, go on. Go. Go.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, so you you are you you primarily doing, like European voices, like Dutch voiceovers, or you called on to do different Euro voices? What kind of what's the character of the work you do? Is it character work?

Paul Strikwerda

Well, you're obviously talking to a character, but most of the stuff is, is interesting. Because it's, I'd say about 80% of the work I do is boring. Elearning which I tried to make interesting. And the most in demand accent is my what they call neutral accent neutral English doesn't really exist, but it's kind of you know, you listen to the voice and say, Where's this person from? I don't know. Is he British? Is he from the United States of America? Is it from New Zealand? No, there's something an in between land of weirdness that I have cornered that market for us. And it seems so if they want to voice that doesn't sound like Yankee or stiff, upper lip brittle solid like that. I I am called upon. So it's a lot of international business stuff. And lately, the pharmaceutical companies have discovered me and they think that I sound like some, some intellectual or somebody who can tell about the latest breakthrough medicine or therapy. And they sometimes they wanted to make more British more American, I can also do a Dutch accent or we talk like this, like normal Dutch people do. The Dutch people have trouble pronouncing the th this a decent death thing instead of this and that. So it was a talk to the client? What kind of poll Do you want to have today on the menu, I try to give that to them. And I'd say about 80% of my work is in English. And then about 20% is still in touch. One of the last things I did a couple of days ago was a museum tour. I like doing guided tours as well, because it's kind of a relaxed pace, and you take people on a journey. It's all about the journey, not the destination. And this is all about global warming. So it was socially relevant as well. So 80% is like that, that every now and then is the odd commercial. So funny when I when I first got my status on a very British, I was asked to be the voice of the Beatles musical to have a jukebox musical called Let it be. And instead of hiring a Brit, they hired me Dutchman to be the voice of the ultimate British musical on Broadway. Which is fun because the next time I came to New York, I was in the back of the taxi and I could hear my own promo, which rarely happens. So I do that too. I still do Attenborough a little bit. My impersonation is much sought after.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, every job it seems on the beta places for eight and

Paul Strikwerda

a half. Yes, yes. Yes. Again, it was very fun because I'm one of the very few touch voiceovers that has had a national commercial in the United States. Not as me but as somebody talking. They'd like Richard Attenborough about Hawaiian french toast from IHOP the International House of Pancakes. Yeah,

Toby Ricketts

it's always fun and feels kind of naughty that like I've done national sports in the US as a American voiceover and just thinking that this I'm just in the middle of nowhere in the studio and New Zealand interest and like it's going out to every home in America to kind of

Paul Strikwerda

say about the imposter syndrome. Well, we are imposters, imposters. Exactly that's that's that's acting acting is being the good imposter, the best imposters get the the Hollywood Walk of Fame star and they get an Oscar. Yeah, the best liars are the best actors. You know. It's true that we get paid to lie because we're pretenders. Yes.

Toby Ricketts

So we're on the the VO life podcast brought to you by gravy for the brain OPI Oceania and you've interacted with Greg for the brain. Over the years. You've a very tight opinion of us. Why is that? Yes,

Paul Strikwerda

yes, yes, absolutely. This is a business about personalities and about connections, personal connections. And the first time I met Peter Peter Dixon and Hugh Edwards was at VO Atlanta. And I've always had a thing for the Brits, I have to say, Holland being close to the UK, me working for the BBC for an hour for a year, which is one of the highlights of my career. If you may say, I've always had a fondness for the British language and British drama. So I have this natural affinity for anything British. So I don't know what would have happened if gray for the brain would have been in Australia, Austrian company or German company with my mother headed off. But you never know. I like these guys instantaneously. I didn't even know what they were up to. Because who knows what bravery for the brain does? It's Yeah, well, it's a name even come from you know,

Unknown Speaker

it's a food company.

Paul Strikwerda

But it was makes for great puns because I wrote this whole story about my sidetrack here, but about my recovering from stroke. I ended with that God had different plans for me that it was my time to go yet. Cuz I was too brainy for the grave. That's pretty good. I love playing with language no matter what language it is. So we met and we hit it off. As they say over here, we hit it off really well. And then started find out what these guys were doing. They were often these amazing, amazing trainings. And really, what I liked is about they they don't seem to if I'm mistaken, let me know. They don't seem to run a get rich, quick scheme. This is really in depth training. That was not there to exploit you. Because there's so many other companies, as you know, that are preying on vulnerable hopefuls that think they can have a Korean voiceovers and if only you buy their Package, which includes 10 demos for free. They will promise you the world. And you end up on an island tried to get off and how did they get there? So so what I found is that this is a company that is really working in a very ethical manner. And going where others have not gone dig, they go deeper, more in depth and beyond. And they keep on supporting you no matter what level sounds like a commercial no matter what level of your career you are. But it's true. That this is not run by pretenders. This is with people, like Peter like you have huge resumes. So they're backed up experienced to better their connections, and they have formed this whole network of love above all is that, you know, colleagues become friends. And that's something I love about the voice of water in general, especially with the with the people that graduate the brain surrounds itself with, you feel like you've never seen each other. But you know, you have something wonderful in common. silliness, of course, because nobody takes themselves too seriously. Hence the name problem, which I also liked. They don't pretend to be better than they are. But it's just fun to hang around with too. And anything that's fun is makes it more easy to learn. So it's this perfect combination of being thoroughly intrigued, thoroughly entertained, but also educated at the same time. I think it's kind of the the university level of voiceover training, I honestly mean that run by the most ethical and wonderful people who also started this, this this voice of conference of one voice and One Voice Awards. And so I said, you know, this is something I can stand behind fully. This is something that I want to associate myself with. And I started doing that. So when, when the first conference was starting, he reached out to me and said, Paul, can you talk about it? Maybe you find it interesting. Maybe you want to write something in your blog about it. And I find it interesting. I wrote about it and people responded to it. And since then, every year when they have a new conference, we get in touch every year when they have new products or services. We get in touch. And it's kind of my way of I know it's cliche, but it's my way of giving back of how much these guys are giving us as a community, me as a person to tell you this, this goes beyond and I'm getting a little bit emotional here. But this goes way beyond talking about the business and voiceovers. Because when I was in the depths of misery in a hospital bed, thinking that it would never talk again, because that was one of the things the stroke did to me. I lost my voice, the ability to speak to emote even one of the first people to reach out to me and say, Hey, Hi, buddy, how you doing? Was you Edwards. And he's kept on doing that ever since every couple of months or so we check in with each other and say how you doing? And that has meant the world to me. So when you mentioned great through the brain, I will walk on fire for them on hot coals for them and do anything I can to help them and spread the message. And and

I can't say enough good things about them. Wow. By the way, this was not a paid promotion. Because I don't get paid by them either. When I write a stock is it's free publicity. But it's really us working together promoting something for the betterment of society. Yeah, because I think there's too many, too many people who are of ill repute, who take advantage of impressionable people. They are not, they are, as I say here, the real deal. It's true. I joke about it. But I think you know what I'm talking about, you know, just when someone like you being associated with Shadid with them as well doing this podcast series, with people who are all in some way linked to grave for the brain. That is a great tribute to the organization that they have built. And then they have this worldwide expansion as well. So they didn't want to keep it confined to the UK. No, the goodies must be spread all around the world. So in every geographical region, like the Oceania, you have grave with the brain for siano for aficionados. So you create more than just voiceovers because we can talk frankly, right, because what we do is is not really about voiceovers at all, I think it's really this discussion that we're having to this interview, it's not really about voiceovers, it's about living up to who you meant to be as a person, you know, about what makes life worthwhile and fulfilling. And for me, it's, it's wonderful if I can be a doctor in a script that will promote certain medications that can save lives. It's wonderful, but it's ultimately the people that you meet. In life, we have an impact on you. And you learn a lot about yourself through your voice, because you can't hide anything, the voice will reveal everything, whether you're tired, whether you just didn't in a divorce, or have gone through a stroke or anything, your voice cannot hide anything. Yeah, so we're very raw, we expose ourselves, we become vulnerable, we have to deal with criticism all the time with rejection all the time, you know, it's the uncertainty of making it to another week or another month. This really throws you back at who you are. And you got to be you got to be strong to survive as a as a one person business. And it's a lonely business, of course, because you're there in your new and improved studio. And I'm here in the middle of nowhere in Vermont, and not really anyone to talk to you about how buddies It's a lonely existence that very few people could really stand because we are social beings, we need water cooler conversations and be with one another. And you don't really have that unless you find a community of people that are like you that know what you're going through, then I'm not really there professionally, but say, Hey, how you doing, buddy? I hurt you were in the hospital. If there's anything I can do, let me know I can do it.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, yeah. And the voice industry like I've I've been really struck every time I've gone to one of the one voice conferences, or or just reached out to anyone in voiceover is that there is this genuine connection that everyone in the working voiceover seems to have with each other. And we don't like it's a competitive game in a way. But I like the fact that when you wit someone, someone wins a job against you. It's not that they did better than you. It's that they were more certain they were more suited to the job. So there's actually any competitiveness is kind of faux competitive risk, because we're all just doing our best and sometimes we're not right for the role, and that's totally fine. And it's the attitude, I think that people need to walk into it with is that, you know, it's about making yourself you know, more appropriate for different kinds of jobs and, and but I I'm I'm fascinated and just I really love that I found this, this industry that does have so much warmth, and there's so much genuine connection. And you know,

Paul Strikwerda

there's so much unpretentiousness, I know it's not a word, but people are unpretentious. Exactly. Yeah. And because I noticed that when I worked in radio and I worked for this big broadcasting company in the Netherlands. And there were two departments radio and television. And both had nice people, but very different people. People in television were much more aware of their personality, because they were in the picture literally all the time, they were recognized on on the streets. And they became very recluse because they didn't want to be bothered by everybody. So they became not so nice persons, but always very, very aware of what they would look like how they would sound like and they did not become themselves and we voice over and radio people, nobody sees us, people only hear us and we're kind of the anonymous workers in the entertainment industry, the disembodied voices. So this, this whole thing about oh, look at me, and his big ego is not really here. A few big egos in the industry, but they deserved it. And rightly so they can, they can be proud of what they have achieved, but not as many as you find in the more visual arts. And that's what I always loved about the voiceover thing. The unpretentiousness of it all, said the end, you know, it's it. It's so fragile, and it's so easily forgotten. You know, people say, Oh, my God did a big commercial. I had to get used to that when it came to United States, people are proud of doing the commercial. And they said, Okay, great. You did a commercial for bathroom tissue. So what you know,

Unknown Speaker

put it on my gravestone

Paul Strikwerda

doesn't really impress me. While you know, it's a national commercial for bathroom tissue. Everybody heard me? Oh, well, okay, great. What do you do for mankind today? You know, it's, to me, it's very oriented about money, and status. And if you want to forget about your status, just get yourself a stroke. Nothing is is worth anything anymore. It comes back to the very simple things in life that make me going and probably make you go into because there's a reason why you do the EMT thing too. Because there's more to life than voiceover sorry, people. There's more to live in voiceovers? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And I do for one another. And that matters. Yeah, exactly.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. And I mean, I think like when I was about to talk about, you know, advice for beginner voiceovers and coaching and things like that, and going on to your book, but like, when people are coming into the industry, like I say to them, this is definitely not a get rich, quick scheme. You may see voiceover artists getting paid, you know, a stupendous amount for one commercial, but they've spent 10 years getting to that point. And they've done most of that, because they absolutely love it. And they were doing it even if they weren't getting paid, which probably was happening anyway, you know, because I would I know that, you know, if I won the lottery or sees the need for money, I would still do this because I get such a kick out of it. And I think it has to be that way. And, you know, doing auditions, everyone should be fun. It shouldn't be a total chore. Did you sort of concur with that you've always found that gives you strength? And that's the advice you give?

Paul Strikwerda

Yes, absolutely. I have to laugh because it is something that makes you happy. And if you do, what you make makes you happy. You have a rich life. And that's, to me is the main thing is to have a rich life in more ways than just monetary compensation mean, I'm not gonna lie about it, I can make a very decent and comfortable living. So it's really easy for me to say, but I've been in the trenches I've, I've, I've been away during the restaurant. I know how hard that is. And so I really started from a big unknown to somebody that that is sought out by clients. And when you look at successful people, you just look at the result and not at the road that that took them there. It's like, you know, you go to a concert. I love classical music. And you see this wonderful classical pianist, make it seem seamless, easy to do, you know, piano concerto Beethoven, Brahms. They just that seems like, Oh, you're such a natural talent. But what we don't see is the many, many, many hours and hardships these people have to go through. I tell people, there's no success without sacrifice. Sorry, you gotta sacrifice you gotta want it more than anybody else in the world. Because otherwise, you're not going to get there. One of my friends is a classical pianist. And a new is going to be famous. You know why? Because every morning, he went to the conservatory, he didn't have a grand piano at his home. But they had pianos for the pianist. And he was the first one in line to be able to open that door to get himself grand piano so you could practice for a couple of hours a day. That's the spirit. That's the spirit. That's what you have to have. You really, really have to want it not something on the side. Not as some hobby or pastime, you really have to want it. And you have to know that involves much more than talking to the microphone, or pointing at a microphone, which you can't see but Hello. It's it's not about that really, at the end of the day. You know, that's only 20% of the workout. If I could do 20% of the work 100% of the time, that would be lovely. Yeah, all got to do the boring stuff, but everybody wants Should the fun stuff. And being becoming successful is having to do and wanting to do the stuff that you think is not too fun. But in the end could be very fun to like, attracting clients through writing a blog, you got to find something that really works for you. And that sets you apart

Toby Ricketts

from making videos, like making videos. And it's funny, you use the example of a classical pianist because I often say to like, one of my examples is like, people come to the Veyron voiceover courses in person occasionally. And people say, you know, when will I start making money from this? Or like, you know, when when can I expect a return on my investment? And it's kind of like, if you've just decided to start a new career, like in something creative. It's a bit like deciding to like, learn the grand piano. It's like if someone went to a music teacher and said, right, when can I make my money back on these lessons? They'd be like, Well, that depends on how much effort you put in how naturally good you are, like, you know, with the drive and determination, like so many factors. And I feel like with VoiceOver, they just expect to like I can read already. I sound pretty good. I'm basically ready. When it's just this this behind the curtain is so much more that people don't understand.

Paul Strikwerda

Oh, yes. It's the whole Wizard of Oz. situation. There's a lot going on behind the curtain that you don't see. But yeah, yeah.

Toby Ricketts

What was the experience of writing the book, like actually, like, what was

Paul Strikwerda

the book because it was really written? It's basically a collection of my old blog. That's one of the Okay,

Toby Ricketts

yeah, fair enough. Yeah. And I was I was, I was a bit like, I wasn't sure because it says making money in your PJs. It sounds like it's easy. Yeah. Were you worried about that title that it would say like, they would sound a bit too easy. And people would read it and think like, by the end of the book, they could be making money. Or they horribly disappointed, something

Paul Strikwerda

really silly and catchy. That was the only reason why I chose it. Yeah. And

Toby Ricketts

actually, incidentally, I almost always wear PJs, when I work at night, when I'm

Paul Strikwerda

wearing PJs right now, because it's bloody early in the morning. I just came out of bed. Honestly, that's no, that's, that's that's the whole deal about it. I had to find a silly hook that people would remember me by. And so they could do so like have a sustainable career in voiceovers or make $1,000 a month as a voiceover artist. And that was actually boring. The best things come out of the most silly thing. So I woke up one morning, I had to go to the studio didn't care to get dressed. They said, Yo, this is the best job ever. I don't even have to wear normal clothes. I can do this in my PJs. Yeah. Well, there it is, Mickey money your PJs. And I kind of addressed that in the first chapter as well, that is, in fact, nothing like easy money at all, you can do this in your PJs, and you probably will, and you should, I can highly recommend it. But, you know, you really have to put on your big boy pants and big girl pants to to make make a dent in the universe of voice RT. So it's not as easy. So it's kind of playful, I play with the ideas. And often, that's not a good quality of mine. But I mock people a little bit, I preach a little bit because I'm the son of a minister. I try to to mock people who want to make things look like it's quick and easy. And never is everything that you think is quick and easy never is. Because otherwise everybody would do it. Everybody would be successful at it. And it's not. So yes, my approach is really to be treating this very, very, very seriously. But with a lot of fun. I had a pleasure that I had a background in radio, which is not always an advantage after my my radio career has helped me tremendously as as a freelancer running the business as a business, of course, but also in the whole thing about approaching people in a business because as a as a roaming reporter, you have to talk to people that don't want to talk to you. You have to talk them into doing an interview, they have to do the interview. They have to cut and paste it and put it in bite sized pieces. All of these things come together as a voice artist, because I had to talk to lots of people who were not intent on hiring me. But I had to convince them like Mel Blanc, by the way, there's a nice segue. He he knocked on the doors of Warner Brothers for two years. And the guy who's hiring voiceover said, Sorry, we have all the voices we need. But he kept on coming back and back and back again until the guy who was in charge of hiring the voices died. Somebody else got in this place. And he said Mel Blanc. Well thank you know what, let's have coffee. Let's hear your voices. And that's how you got in the door. And the second job he did was the voice of a pig, which became Porky Pig. So you need this persistence, this kind of I don't care whatever the outcome is, I'm doing it anyway thing. Even though you know that everything depends on it. You have to work as if it doesn't. Because otherwise you become too desperate. You don't want to be too desperate. You don't all other thing you should Didn't do is invest lots of money and lots of expensive equipment in the beginning and, and this has become fingered as a lot easier to start in this business because you can buy a new microphone for two holida $100 Like the RODE NT ones perfectly fine. Voice Over microphone super quiet.

Toby Ricketts

And the Focusrite Scarlett series, they're incredibly good value for their sound these days, like go back five years, that was just not possible. So I know

Paul Strikwerda

it's been it's really been amazing how that has, how the technology has cheapened in the way. And so it's easy to get started. But you know, I am a frequent visitor of eBay and I can recognize a voice artist who has given up his dream. Post

Unknown Speaker

the package executive package that is online, it's like so focus, focus, right solo, some headphones

Paul Strikwerda

with a free pop filter.

Toby Ricketts

So you've got a new book coming out. You're telling me before What's this one making lots of money in your pjs

Paul Strikwerda

don't wear anything the naked voiceover don't find a catchy title yet. But some people said I should put my big fat face on the cover that will sell so a lot but I I was I was going to call it the self sustaining voice over because that's that's the big thing that I that I teach people advocate in my blog as well to become self sustaining. Sustaining career not just a fling. Sounds boring. So I gotta find something else. So if you have any suggestions, please write a gravy of the brain attention to Mr. Paul string for the middle of nowhere Vermont, USA. And I will get get to me straightaway and they'll give you credits. But it's really about what it's what it takes to become a self sustaining. VoiceOver so. So what's going to be is a couple of years ago, I noticed that the subscribership to my blog was stagnating. And I thought that I had reached the limit of people that I could reach because we have a very small community. I only have 40,000 subscribers, which isn't known to the big bloggers, but a lot of people who blogs, whoa, 40,000. That's a whole thing. But I want to at least have 400,000 and 4 million, why not $4 billion subscribers. So I said I had to tap into a new market. And I started doing micro blogs under the name of Nether voice on Instagram. And Instagram gives you about 2200 characters to write a story. And so I do a mini blog every single day about the business. So it's something that you can read in a minute. So what I'm going to do for this new book is just have bite sized pieces that you can reach read at the beginning of the end of the day or just in between me to take a break when you need like a vitamin shot in the arm, a little bit energy boost. But running a business about doing voiceovers about being a good person.

Toby Ricketts

That's a good idea. I often would need something that's like well, well my audio is processing or something I need something that's like yeah, like a minute long just to pass that time. So we're not just staring at a progress bar.

Paul Strikwerda

Yeah, cuz people's attention spans are getting shorter and shorter. So I tend to write these lengthy blogs that it takes us seven minutes or seven minutes to read. But I try to be thorough and so if you if you like the small parts of try to convert people to come to my website and eventually read my blog that's been working, I am tapping into a new and younger audience then the Instagram people are coming to my blog because they if you want to have a more in depth story, you can read the full story on my blog, but the short things I think I caught on to something there. And so the nice thing for me is that it's basically already written now the big trick about being a good writer is not being good writer bits but being a good writer you have to edit your own work and make it even better. So I'm in that process now selecting out of all the pieces that have had something that is not as voluminous as making money in a PJs because that is a chunk of a book because I noticed that some people let me get it here at this and self promotion

Unknown Speaker

app to screen to mess with

Paul Strikwerda

the scenery here.

Unknown Speaker

Oh wow that was candid.

Paul Strikwerda

always worked with very sturdy equipment. Exactly. But the best for me so Gobo for your life from GE ik acoustics you together you have a base panel like this then you have somebody that

Toby Ricketts

you can stand it up but like he did try a Japanese screen or something.

Paul Strikwerda

Exactly. Yes. So this is about is

Unknown Speaker

thick, isn't it?

Paul Strikwerda

Is very thick. It has too many pages. I pedaled this around for a couple of voiceover friends that I wanted to have the input from. And they said, Paul, this will never sell because it's too long. And look at the last page is 423 Bloody pages. Wow. Yeah, you could build

Unknown Speaker

and then a bookshelf out of those books I know. But

Paul Strikwerda

as you can see, there's a lot of whitespace. So like to make things in bite size paragraphs, but so my promise, my dear readers, my next book is going to be a lot shorter. And sweeter, I hope.

Toby Ricketts

Yeah. Like the short form, I think, like and I'm gonna subscribe to Instagram as well, if I'm not already to catch those blogs, because that sounds very interesting.

Paul Strikwerda

It's just easy. Add another voice and you'll you'll get something every day. And in fact, today I'm writing about the birthday of a certain voice artist. Oh, who is beginning it Surprise, surprise.

Toby Ricketts

You often blog on technology, voiceover technology, which is one of my passions. I just love technology associated with voice. I love helping people with the technology because like some people find it really difficult. And I just find it so easy and easy to explain that I just I just want to help people with it. Because I it reaffirms the knowledge of myself as well. Actually do to your article about the U 87. Microphones? Yes, I ordered one. And I hoped it would be here by the time we did this interview, but it's still in transit. But I'm really because I've got a u 87. here and I want to put them side by side. There it is. I wanted like absolutely, like do an article that that just like picks every detail and massive because a bowl accounts. It works really well. Right? Yeah. So I'm very keen to send fake so I'll send you my test results, side by side of the real thing. And those because like, it sounds like there's not much in it, which is interesting. But you've blogged the like, What's your favorite thing about studio sound is it mics, it interfaces, computers are the whole lot.

Paul Strikwerda

There's nothing that I don't like really, I love playing around with them. It's it just makes juice to toy around with things and have manufacturers send me free stuff. I need to get to know that thing too, that I that I that I'm on a mission to to educate my readers, and educate myself really because there's so much great stuff being made right now take for instance company like Austrian audio, which just came came out of AKG and Luhut. And I always loved discovering things that were not used by others. Because I if there's something I hate is that people say this is the inst industry standard, say must have the industry standard. Otherwise, you don't count as a voiceover artists. There's so much great stuff on the road NTG five in the short shotgun microphone is a wonderful like the for one thing is way better than a 416 of a cheaper two. So why not test that. And so I wanted to give people an idea of there's so much more than going for the TLM 103, or the MK h 416, or the U 87. So out of my own curiosity, I started writing about it. And then I got in touch with a guy who runs a big microphone database on the internet. And he now runs a company called Roswell audio, where he's making his own microphones. And as I'm trying to, as I'm talking about, I'm trying to think about the name of the website is a Big Mac microphone database. Anyway, he invited me to start writing for him and test microphone. So that's what I did. And this is a test for him and write stuff about it. I might as well do it for myself to put it on my blog. And that's what I did. And the nice thing is that once you write honest reviews, people recognize that and manufacturers too. And I tried to write about it in a non technical way because I'm not a George Witham who is one of the experts on home studio building and technology. I'm not a sound engineer like Uncle Roy, your cousin is or Dan Leonard, you know, those are people who approach it often from from the more technical side, I just use my voice over ears in my voiceover surroundings and say what would work what wouldn't break the bank and what makes this microphone different from other microphones? And what do I think would be a good bet for people? Because I hate I hate people spending money on things that they don't know how to use yet. Yeah. Or did they go broke on equipment that they don't even need? You know?

Toby Ricketts

Yeah, exactly like people buying UAV sevens because it's the industry standard. And it's like yeah, it's so overpowered in terms of like what you need and you also like the thing about like when I bought this UAV seven I was in my other my old booth and it actually it's it sounded terrible in that old booth because I'd like I was I had designed it around for 16 to a super directional all the soundproofing was on one end, but a cardioid comes in and starts picking up all of the room ambience. And it was just And it's one of those mics that's brutally honest as well, if you don't have a good space, it just does not sound good. So it was a real like wake up call for me in terms of like, you know, don't you don't just spend the earth and then it doesn't just deliver suddenly a great voiceover. It's like, that's when the work starts. And then you can you can go further with, I think, these mics and they're very dependable. But in terms of sound, it doesn't save you any money at all. Like it won't get you gigs.

Paul Strikwerda

And I suppose all your oils, that's what it does. Yeah. And so a lot of microphones are much more flattering. But now, what's happened since COVID, is that a lot of people have entered the market. They all thought, you know, this is the best job to be doing from your basement or your attic. So we've had a lot of new voiceovers, which I don't mind, everybody is allowed to chase his own or her own dream. But in order to separate the wheat from the chaff, some agents have said, well, you're not going to be added to my roster unless you have this and that type of equipment. Yeah, so people buy Apollo preamplifiers, and the whole package with a plugins and they have to have the 416 and the TLM, one or three and the UHD. Seven, and otherwise, you you're not on the map, and you're not taking your job seriously, which I think is nonsense. But it is kind of a badge of honor. And look what I can afford to I've landed. So on one hand, people can tell whether you're serious or not, but the equipment that you have. And so I had run into this problem because I had this wonderful shotgun microphone, called the Cinco de

Unknown Speaker

to omega Chai. I heard about this, the Pratik scored 156

Paul Strikwerda

US dollars, but retails normally for 250. And honestly, I can't tell the difference between the D two and 460. Maybe my ears are not refined enough. But you know what kinds are not listening on refined equipment either. So I think it's often a moot point. But so I was using that one. And I was landing big jobs. And nobody ever said, Oh, you you sounds like you're using a cheap Chinese microphone. Yeah. Yeah. But then it became time to get to a different space in Vermont now and I thought it would be time to upgrade my microphone a little bit. And I wanted to find another shortcut microphone and I ended up with this one. This is the Sennheiser MKH 8060, which is the successor to the famous 416. Very short one, two, I'm not going to unplug because you want me not hear me. But look this.

Unknown Speaker

Yeah, it's like half the length, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah, baby.

Paul Strikwerda

Those five things for me.

Toby Ricketts

More oh, five, I think the four or five they did a version 2.6. That was like, shorter. But, but yeah. And I think the longer the barrel is, the more the interference tube is the more sharp and the more like pronounced the HyperCard effectors. Yeah, it's just really is just like laser focused on you get, but it becomes unwieldy at a certain point. It's like once it's 20 feet long, it's kind of impractical. Now it's

Paul Strikwerda

out of the way, you know, when you do a lot of social media, you don't want this big microphone in front of your face. So yeah, it works really nice in this direction.

Toby Ricketts

I like this one in front of my face, though. This is my like, it's I feel like this this culture that's grown up in our microphones, like, it's the same reason that like Conan O'Brien, and they put a microphone on their desk. You know, it gives, it's a visual indicator of like, this is a microphone. This is what you expect when you see a voiceover and I've kind of like I took that and thought like, with my whole, like, Zoom background. I was like, let's market the space.

Paul Strikwerda

That's the background is that that's fake.

Unknown Speaker

I know. That's real. It's real. Right? Yeah. But it's yeah, the Fender Rhodes. I see. It is it's Fender Rhodes. Yeah, man. Do

Toby Ricketts

you play suitcase road? So yeah, play keys. Yep, absolutely. Yeah. And a little bit of bass on the wall there as well, somewhere fantastic. And drink whiskey in the background. So all my interests are represented, you know, around my head, along with a voice summarizing

Paul Strikwerda

all that's great for the brain is about you know, making music, drinking good whiskey and enjoying a nice microphone. Exactly.

Toby Ricketts

Exactly. Yeah. We better wrap it up soon. Because I mean, you're beginning to work day soon. And it's and we've succeeded

Paul Strikwerda

in the United States. Today, we sort of made the honor the the people who lost their lives for their country. So we got Fun and Games, because when America celebrates something, it's always fun and games, no matter whether it's Memorial Day or not. Yeah, so that means discounts in the stores gotta go to buy. Yeah, and we have parades. We have these poor veterans who are like 80 9100 years old, and we parade them around the town from making walk for a couple of miles. And at the end, they have to listen to speeches that never end and then they have to eat and drink again and buy stuff. That's the

Unknown Speaker

stuff is the rule. Yeah, keep it going. Keep it all going.

Paul Strikwerda

Absolutely. So on this Veterans Day, bye, bye. But here's here's one, here's one thing I want to do. Yeah. Because you've been so nice to me and give me all this time to to talk about myself and about Mel Blanc and all these things. So if you're watching this interview right now, and you think that what you've heard is Interesting and silly and absurd, but also, hey, I'd like to hear more or learn more. Please write to me, please. At Paul at Nether voice.com One word Nether as the Netherlands voices voice Paul another voice.com. reference this interview. And I will send you a free digital copy of my book, a PDF version, which is even after one even longer because everything I didn't put in the printed version, it's like 600 pages of of me. You can watch every aspect of the voiceover business. And I write stuff that people don't like to hear. So I can be honest, brutally honest. But fair, I think. But so yeah, pull it near the voice.com References interview, even if you hear this, that 10 years from now, 20 years from now, I will still be there. Hopefully, I can send you a PDF copy of the book for free just as a way to say thank you for putting up with me all this time.

Toby Ricketts

No problem. No, it's been a pleasure. Thank you so much for joining me and all the best with your your Veterans Day celebrations.

Paul Strikwerda

Well, my my father in law is a veteran, and he will be all dressed up and I will be applauding him. Yes. Which is very wonderful to do. So it's I make fun of it. But it's a serious thing too. I think that we should give credit to the people who put their lives on the line, you know, and we his voiceovers live such protective secluded life here. But it's not an easy job. But in many ways, it's a very comfortable job.

Toby Ricketts

I do feel like I have to gratitude is very important in this job. You know what you work hard for it, but you do when you get there, it's nice to really sort of you know, to to give thanks for it and acknowledge the

Paul Strikwerda

reason you and I can do what we do in our freedom is because we owe a lot to these to these people. So with all jokes, joking apart, I really, really mean that. I'm glad that have an opportunity a day to honor these people. And really, I think we should have every day a day like that where we honor the people who gave everything without expecting anything. So on this somber note, we have to say with Mel Blanc, that's all folks. Thank you, Toby. It was a

Unknown Speaker

joy. Thanks, Paul. It absolutely was Cheers. Bye

Transcribed by https://otter.ai