It's been my experience when a client voices their own ad, breaking it into short bursts interspersed with an...
It's been my experience when a client voices their own ad, breaking it into short bursts interspersed with an announcer (in this campaign, one who's kind of a chowder head) tends to be more friendly to the ears of a casual listener. But occasionally it's good to let said client voice the whole thing. The caveat is making sure there's a fly in the ointment to keep the unpredictable campaign scenario going. In this sample I just had one voice part, which was minor. But, when you give the client palatable direction, they can pull it off and hopefully leave some members of the audience with a "sheepish" grin.
Promo from Kurt's archives... Kurt adds these notes: "As I continue going through the archives, I forgot
about a...
Promo from Kurt's archives... Kurt adds these notes: "As I continue going through the archives, I forgot
about a series of popular promos (19 in all) I did for our weather provider (yes, you don't have to always
be serious with weather promos). It helped personalize these folks based out of State College, Pennsylvania -- but also made 'em a little paranoid after one of our staffers at the time sent them samples of what I was doing."
Another option with this whole "making the client sound relatable" campaign I've been submitting has been to make...
Another option with this whole "making the client sound relatable" campaign I've been submitting has been to make said client the voice of reason in the midst of dealing with his dopey announcer. Nothing like bursting one's bubble to keep things from going totally off the rails...
This is a great idea submitted by Al Peterson. Al adds these notes:
A consultant at the recent Talkers...
This is a great idea submitted by Al Peterson. Al adds these notes:
A consultant at the recent Talkers conference is telling station managers to create an on-air voice drop that says, "Hey Alexa ...(pause) ... play the [morning show podcast]!", complete with the mandatory pause that activates the data assistant.
Alexa is already doing too much for lazy fat-assed Americans and she's fighting back!
Fun to splice into some rotating fake "Hey Alexa!" promos on a rocker. FWIW, the voice came off this website: https://www.naturalreaders.com/online/ -- with a little filtering and speaker distortion provided by a vintage copy of Cool Edit.
Demo submitted by Andrew for his 1997 interview with RAP. The demo features commercials all written by Andrew....
Demo submitted by Andrew for his 1997 interview with RAP. The demo features commercials all written by Andrew. Production is credited to Mark Del Villar, who produced all but two of the spots.
Q It Up: One thing consolidation has done is increase the amount of outsourcing radio stations do for their commercial and imaging production. Do your stations outsource voice, production, and/or copywriting? If so, who do you use and for what? Do you use just one service or several? For example, ...