VC Radio
Voice Coaches Radio #673 – Pivoting & Shifting Since 2020
Voice coaches radio, everything voiceover. Hey there. Welcome to a brand new episode of Voice Coaches Radio. Can I tell you outta nowhere. It got so hot around here. And the thing is, it's. It's one of those weird situations where it hasn't even been all that beautiful out. Like, I mean, the, the temperature's warm and it's humid, but it's been kind of gloomy and rainy until today we've had a beautiful Friday, uh, but last night trying to sleep sticky, like, you know, just like hot and sticky in the bedroom and I'm like, Ugh, it's three o'clock in the morning.
I don't wanna go and try to get the AC and try to put that in the window right now. You know? I would drop that, it would land on like the garage roof. I'd have to get a new roof. Like it would just be one domino after another falling. And I just, I didn't want that at three o'clock in the morning. So I'm gonna get it out and get it ready just in case we need it tonight.
Uh, we'll decide. But, uh, yeah, it, it's definitely, it's been a hot one baby. Um, as, as Randy Jackson may have said long ago on American Idol, um, but. Hopefully you're enjoying yourself. We're just about a week away from the unofficial kickoff to summer. So thankfully things are heading in that direction and we can go ahead and hopefully, uh, get some vacations under our belt and enjoy ourselves in some nice weather time very, very soon.
And, uh, you know, wanna kind of dive into some more voiceover. 'cause you know, that's what we're here for. That's what we're doing. That's we hang out. And it just feels like a good old hang sometimes. But, you know, I'm trying to throw some, some good old knowledge your way. I wanna, you know, throw the spaghetti on the wall and see what sticks, you know?
Um, but there's been a lot of things that have changed over the last few years. You know, I had a student earlier today and. She's had a lot going on in her world. Shout out to Mia. Uh, you know, she first met me back in 2021. Honestly, when I looked at the data, I was like, holy crap. That is right after I started.
So, like, she may have been like one of my actual first students that I was teaching on my own after getting trained and all that. Here at Voice coaches. But she had a lot of things that went on and, uh, just a lot of negative things. Um, you know, just family things. And, uh, it took her out of the program for a while, but, uh, you know, had her back today and we were catching up and, you know, so much has changed just from the time I met her to now.
Not like just personally for both of us, but in the way that a lot of the business has been functioning, you know, and it all comes back. As much as, we don't wanna say it, the COVID-19 pandemic, we celebrated ish, the, the, the anniversary of it, uh, back in March. It's five years that it, you know, kicked off and five years ago where the world seemingly changed forever.
You know, they kept saying that whole like, new, normal, new norm, uh, and everybody's like, oh God, enough with a new norm. And, and in reality it is a new norm. In so many ways. It's crazy. You know, when I look back and I think of how I worked for a good 15 years leading up to that time, it was much different.
You know, I was at one job and I, um, I. You know, it was in one spot, it was a localized studio, and everything was live or in the moment kind of work, you know, doing it, you know, getting a script and going and, and recording it right there in that moment, and like going back and doing a radio show and then going to an event and everything was in the moment.
Live in action and a lot of hustle, honestly. I mean, my life was very, very, very busy. And not that it's not busy now, but it's, it's busy in a different way, you know? So one, once, once the pandemic happened, you know, all the work, all the opportunity that so many of us were doing just immediately either got taken away, no longer existed.
Or was just production shut down, you know? And, and that was just how it was. And, and we had to kinda wait and be patient and, and see what would happen. And, you know, I watched a lot of my friends that were working full-time in radio 'cause I was like in between, at that time I was about to start new stuff and, uh, that, that kind of, you know, got put on the back burner and then just fizzled out because of the pandemic.
But you know, those of my friends who were live on the radio full time doing their thing. I mean, they got stuck doing so much extra stuff. And at first, I mean this is, you know, trying to navigate it in such a different way because you were, a lot of the time, a lot of them were doing it from home remote.
Like we had to, you know, limit exposure. Right. Haven't heard that in a while. Um, but that was happening for the, the entire industry and not just our industry, but businesses in general. They were trying to. Figure out how can we have these meetings? How can we still get the work done? How can we do this without having to be physically.
You know, with each other and trying to navigate Zoom was very, very challenging for so many people because it was new, you know, now it seems like how could this possibly be difficult? But it was just so new. Uh, you know, we had Skype, but it wasn't really the same, you know, and we were able to have like multiple people on a call and like take these big meetings and like all of this, and how could we then translate that and make it work with this industry as well.
I mean we, we most certainly have, you know, I can tell you right now that it's like you would have like a producer or. Uh, maybe, um, you know, a client being able to just listen in as you are recording a session and direct you from that, you know, and, and say, you know, I like that. Can we, can we take it again?
Can you make sure that you emphasize this word and just make it a little bit brighter? Or maybe slow down or emphasize this more, like, you know, being able to have that direction down a zoom line. It's so incredibly helpful, but like, it was really, really challenging at first to be able to. To do even that, as silly as it, it sounds again.
But, um, you know, it was, it was new ways of exploring. It was new ways of creating and, and delivering and, um, you know, the pandemic really made it so a lot of pivoting had to happen and, and continuously and, uh, you know, that is something that, that, that pivoting motion, I feel like has been continuous ever since like.
You know, it's, it's not done it as frequently these days, but it's still, things continue to shift and, you know, different budgets continue to shift and, you know, people are still trying to dig out of holes, the pandemic created and all this kind of stuff. So how, how has this truly affected things otherwise?
Uh, when it comes to voiceover? Well, I mean, the. Just, just the fact that so many of us we're so accustomed to going to a studio and just, you know, being the, the talent where you go into the booth and it is just like, Hey, you, yeah, you monkey dance. You know, we are the one that goes in and we say the words.
That's that. You know, this whole last few years has made it so remote opportunity. Has just grown at such, such a rapid pace and it made it so we're not just necessarily the voice, you know, we're not necessarily just the talent. We are potentially everything. You know, we're the one that's. Voicing it, but then, you know, we're making sure that it's recording, it's recording properly, the sound quality is up to par.
You know, we're making sure that the editing is done and you know, if they need, like, we're trying to acquire everything that they are requiring from us. You, you know what I mean? We're getting, uh, multiple takes of things and giving a variety of. Of, uh, options so they can go ahead and, and piece together exactly what they're looking for, maybe if they're not remotely directing us, and you know that, that means that there's a learning curve that comes along.
If you're somebody who's never done any of this remotely and you've never had a home studio and you never. Really used a mic outside of a professional setting and you didn't have a laptop that had the capability before. Like all of a sudden, you know, these are all things that people had to like run out.
Well, couldn't even run out. Right. You had to go ahead and try to like purchase online and Oh my goodness. Do you remember how challenging it was sometimes to actually get things delivered? Like. God forbid you tried to get a puzzle, uh, at the time. I mean, they were backed up for months. Um, you know, there's probably a puzzle.
I'm still waiting on delivery. Uh, but, you know, this was, it was all a big, big learning curve for so many, and it did make it so. There's just a lot of different opportunity than there was before. I'm prime example, you know, the, the radio industry was notoriously an industry where you had to move for your job, you know, if you wanted to work in the industry, then it, it's just like newscasters, like you gotta go where the job is and the job might.
Not be exactly where you wanna be, but if you wanna get to where you wanna be, you gotta take your little hop, skip and jump and it's like lily pads and trying to, you know, reach to the opportunity in the major market that your ultimate goal might be. And, you know, I did, I, I lived in here in Albany. I've, uh, been on the radio and Glens Falls, New York.
I've been on the radio in, uh, got, uh. Uh, why is the name completely leaving my brain right now? Uh, there was a, a town in Vermont that I just can't remember, um, but I was on Vermont. Um, I had moved to Omaha, Nebraska at one point. Uh, you know, I talk about it a lot that I, you know, lived in Boston for a while and, you know, I.
I was about to live in Connecticut. I was about to live in like the Hartford, west Hartford area for work. Um, you know, it was a bounce around kind of field. And now I have been working from my home studio. I. Since 2020, uh, the moment I was able to get back in my house, this studio was set up, this was ready to go.
Before I was in here, I was living with my parents briefly in between and, and I set up shop right there in their garage and I made it work. You know, it's like anything that was coming my way, I wasn't saying no to anything. And I was just like, all right, let's go. Let's, let's make this work. And, uh, you know, I can say that it hasn't always been easy, especially when.
I've tried to take like equipment on the road with me. That is the beautiful thing about it, right? Like if it's working remote, the work can then go with you wherever you want to be. So if I wanna go on vacation, I can go on vacation, I can be on a sunny beach in Florida and I can get the work done at the hotel.
Uh, but of course we were already having challenging things and my fiance's grandmother was sick and we were in Vermont. And I, I was just trying to get things set up at. Uh, my, my fiance's parents' house and like, could not get the settings right for whatever reason. Things didn't wanna work for me that day.
And I was so, so frustrated because we were already like, emotions high, right? And, uh. I think there was one show I just couldn't do. You know, the rest of it got done, but one show couldn't happen and I was like, man, this is not how this is supposed to work. But you know, again, this is like a lot of troubleshooting and this is a lot of learning and that is how the industry has changed.
You know, before I would've been just. Speak in words, and, uh, now I'm a little bit of everything and you can be too, but this, it makes it so there's so much more opportunity out there to be had and there's so much more money to be ba to be made. And, uh, you know, this just gives us some, some great, um, you know, wings to spread too.
You know, it's like before maybe it was just one style of work and that was what that studio did for you, whatever. And you know, now it's so much that could be on your plate at any given time. Um. You know, the sound quality tweaks, I will tell you can be very challenging. Uh, like, you know, it took me a minute to figure out what I had to do and, uh, you know, it really came down to some of the stupidest things.
You know, I, I've mentioned how like I have a wall in my studio that is simply cardboard boxes in a sheet. Uh, you would be be amazed at how much sound absorption, uh, that stuff does, but like you literally can every studio set up. That is remote, that is home, you will find is different. And I will look at some people's and I'm just like jealous of the equipment they got.
But I also am like, but I don't really need that. You know, that's money I don't really need to spend. Maybe one day, you know, maybe one day I'll upgrade myself a little bit and I'll go ahead and I'll, I'll bite the bullet. I'll get that. But I actually don't really need it. It's just like fun to look at. Uh, you know, but everyone is a little different.
For me, I, I kind of like my, my adult fort. It, it is, uh, my, my home, my home away from home. But it's actually within my home. You know? It's, it's where I am at the majority of my days. And, uh, you know, it's, it's me to a t So you gotta have a, a space that you feel good about. Um, you know, it's, it's the amount of work too that has also changed.
'cause I think what happened too, before, you know, a lot of businesses. It was like, all right, they would have a commercial maybe, um, you know, they would have a training video. Maybe they would have maybe some content for their web, maybe some content for in store or whatever. But you had a lot of businesses that all of a sudden they, they needed to do new training videos because, well, the work needed to be done in a different way.
Right? So all of a sudden we've got like, you know, an abundance of new training that needs to be voiced and, uh. You know, new commercials to be read because well, um, the, the storefront isn't open, but hey, you can check us out online and, uh, we want to make sure that you realize we're a part of the community and we hope that you and your loved ones are staying safe.
Like there was a lot of, um, togetherness, even though we were a part that was being. Pushed out into the airwaves. Um, you know, there was a lot more companies that were doing things like podcasts and that also needed certain elements to go along with it, that they were kind of troubleshooting along the way and would need, uh, different things voiced.
And, you know, it's amazing the things that came just across a, a very short amount of time and, and things that happened just so rapidly. Um, but. It's made it, so I think now, this many years later, you know, we're aware of capabilities, possibilities, and we're not scared of it either. Like, change is always scary, but we've seen what's possible and, and, um, the, the, the whole thing of like, you know.
Being able to work together and to troubleshoot and to make things happen. You know, it's like we've got a great. Community in voiceover to, to kind of lean on to, to make those things happen. And it's just, it's a really, really beautiful thing. Honestly. Um, you know, I am very privileged. I feel like, to work the way that I do.
Uh, you know, it allows for so much flexibility. It, it allows me to do. Everything that I love from the comfort of my home, I know that my puppy really, really, really loves it. She's asleep on the table next to me right now and, uh, you would never even know 'cause this is what she does. She gets in the studio, she gets on her blanket, she passes out.
And do you, you have no idea how happy that makes me, uh, you know, as a human. Um, 'cause uh, that was also something that wasn't really possible a whole lot before. Uh, but yeah, the, the world of voiceover, the world itself has changed and, uh, as much. As you know, we did hate that time of the COVID-19 pandemic.
I think that it has brought so much possibility to. Your voiceover career and mine. Um, so look, look at all the possibility and see where you wanna be and start taking those steps if you haven't already, to make some things happen for yourself. Any way that we can help. Whether you wanna be a part of the program, we can get some more [email protected].
Um. You know, we're always doing workshops. You can always, you know, save a few bucks if you use promo codes that are out there. And, uh, you know, if you've got questions, you can always bounce 'em off me as well of anything that you want discussed on the pod [email protected]. I hope that, uh, you know, you're feeling good as we're entering the summer months and I look forward to, you know, hearing what you guys gotta say at [email protected].
Uh, brand new episode is coming at you next week. Stay safe, everybody. Visit voice coaches.com for more voiceover news and information.
I don't wanna go and try to get the AC and try to put that in the window right now. You know? I would drop that, it would land on like the garage roof. I'd have to get a new roof. Like it would just be one domino after another falling. And I just, I didn't want that at three o'clock in the morning. So I'm gonna get it out and get it ready just in case we need it tonight.
Uh, we'll decide. But, uh, yeah, it, it's definitely, it's been a hot one baby. Um, as, as Randy Jackson may have said long ago on American Idol, um, but. Hopefully you're enjoying yourself. We're just about a week away from the unofficial kickoff to summer. So thankfully things are heading in that direction and we can go ahead and hopefully, uh, get some vacations under our belt and enjoy ourselves in some nice weather time very, very soon.
And, uh, you know, wanna kind of dive into some more voiceover. 'cause you know, that's what we're here for. That's what we're doing. That's we hang out. And it just feels like a good old hang sometimes. But, you know, I'm trying to throw some, some good old knowledge your way. I wanna, you know, throw the spaghetti on the wall and see what sticks, you know?
Um, but there's been a lot of things that have changed over the last few years. You know, I had a student earlier today and. She's had a lot going on in her world. Shout out to Mia. Uh, you know, she first met me back in 2021. Honestly, when I looked at the data, I was like, holy crap. That is right after I started.
So, like, she may have been like one of my actual first students that I was teaching on my own after getting trained and all that. Here at Voice coaches. But she had a lot of things that went on and, uh, just a lot of negative things. Um, you know, just family things. And, uh, it took her out of the program for a while, but, uh, you know, had her back today and we were catching up and, you know, so much has changed just from the time I met her to now.
Not like just personally for both of us, but in the way that a lot of the business has been functioning, you know, and it all comes back. As much as, we don't wanna say it, the COVID-19 pandemic, we celebrated ish, the, the, the anniversary of it, uh, back in March. It's five years that it, you know, kicked off and five years ago where the world seemingly changed forever.
You know, they kept saying that whole like, new, normal, new norm, uh, and everybody's like, oh God, enough with a new norm. And, and in reality it is a new norm. In so many ways. It's crazy. You know, when I look back and I think of how I worked for a good 15 years leading up to that time, it was much different.
You know, I was at one job and I, um, I. You know, it was in one spot, it was a localized studio, and everything was live or in the moment kind of work, you know, doing it, you know, getting a script and going and, and recording it right there in that moment, and like going back and doing a radio show and then going to an event and everything was in the moment.
Live in action and a lot of hustle, honestly. I mean, my life was very, very, very busy. And not that it's not busy now, but it's, it's busy in a different way, you know? So one, once, once the pandemic happened, you know, all the work, all the opportunity that so many of us were doing just immediately either got taken away, no longer existed.
Or was just production shut down, you know? And, and that was just how it was. And, and we had to kinda wait and be patient and, and see what would happen. And, you know, I watched a lot of my friends that were working full-time in radio 'cause I was like in between, at that time I was about to start new stuff and, uh, that, that kind of, you know, got put on the back burner and then just fizzled out because of the pandemic.
But you know, those of my friends who were live on the radio full time doing their thing. I mean, they got stuck doing so much extra stuff. And at first, I mean this is, you know, trying to navigate it in such a different way because you were, a lot of the time, a lot of them were doing it from home remote.
Like we had to, you know, limit exposure. Right. Haven't heard that in a while. Um, but that was happening for the, the entire industry and not just our industry, but businesses in general. They were trying to. Figure out how can we have these meetings? How can we still get the work done? How can we do this without having to be physically.
You know, with each other and trying to navigate Zoom was very, very challenging for so many people because it was new, you know, now it seems like how could this possibly be difficult? But it was just so new. Uh, you know, we had Skype, but it wasn't really the same, you know, and we were able to have like multiple people on a call and like take these big meetings and like all of this, and how could we then translate that and make it work with this industry as well.
I mean we, we most certainly have, you know, I can tell you right now that it's like you would have like a producer or. Uh, maybe, um, you know, a client being able to just listen in as you are recording a session and direct you from that, you know, and, and say, you know, I like that. Can we, can we take it again?
Can you make sure that you emphasize this word and just make it a little bit brighter? Or maybe slow down or emphasize this more, like, you know, being able to have that direction down a zoom line. It's so incredibly helpful, but like, it was really, really challenging at first to be able to. To do even that, as silly as it, it sounds again.
But, um, you know, it was, it was new ways of exploring. It was new ways of creating and, and delivering and, um, you know, the pandemic really made it so a lot of pivoting had to happen and, and continuously and, uh, you know, that is something that, that, that pivoting motion, I feel like has been continuous ever since like.
You know, it's, it's not done it as frequently these days, but it's still, things continue to shift and, you know, different budgets continue to shift and, you know, people are still trying to dig out of holes, the pandemic created and all this kind of stuff. So how, how has this truly affected things otherwise?
Uh, when it comes to voiceover? Well, I mean, the. Just, just the fact that so many of us we're so accustomed to going to a studio and just, you know, being the, the talent where you go into the booth and it is just like, Hey, you, yeah, you monkey dance. You know, we are the one that goes in and we say the words.
That's that. You know, this whole last few years has made it so remote opportunity. Has just grown at such, such a rapid pace and it made it so we're not just necessarily the voice, you know, we're not necessarily just the talent. We are potentially everything. You know, we're the one that's. Voicing it, but then, you know, we're making sure that it's recording, it's recording properly, the sound quality is up to par.
You know, we're making sure that the editing is done and you know, if they need, like, we're trying to acquire everything that they are requiring from us. You, you know what I mean? We're getting, uh, multiple takes of things and giving a variety of. Of, uh, options so they can go ahead and, and piece together exactly what they're looking for, maybe if they're not remotely directing us, and you know that, that means that there's a learning curve that comes along.
If you're somebody who's never done any of this remotely and you've never had a home studio and you never. Really used a mic outside of a professional setting and you didn't have a laptop that had the capability before. Like all of a sudden, you know, these are all things that people had to like run out.
Well, couldn't even run out. Right. You had to go ahead and try to like purchase online and Oh my goodness. Do you remember how challenging it was sometimes to actually get things delivered? Like. God forbid you tried to get a puzzle, uh, at the time. I mean, they were backed up for months. Um, you know, there's probably a puzzle.
I'm still waiting on delivery. Uh, but, you know, this was, it was all a big, big learning curve for so many, and it did make it so. There's just a lot of different opportunity than there was before. I'm prime example, you know, the, the radio industry was notoriously an industry where you had to move for your job, you know, if you wanted to work in the industry, then it, it's just like newscasters, like you gotta go where the job is and the job might.
Not be exactly where you wanna be, but if you wanna get to where you wanna be, you gotta take your little hop, skip and jump and it's like lily pads and trying to, you know, reach to the opportunity in the major market that your ultimate goal might be. And, you know, I did, I, I lived in here in Albany. I've, uh, been on the radio and Glens Falls, New York.
I've been on the radio in, uh, got, uh. Uh, why is the name completely leaving my brain right now? Uh, there was a, a town in Vermont that I just can't remember, um, but I was on Vermont. Um, I had moved to Omaha, Nebraska at one point. Uh, you know, I talk about it a lot that I, you know, lived in Boston for a while and, you know, I.
I was about to live in Connecticut. I was about to live in like the Hartford, west Hartford area for work. Um, you know, it was a bounce around kind of field. And now I have been working from my home studio. I. Since 2020, uh, the moment I was able to get back in my house, this studio was set up, this was ready to go.
Before I was in here, I was living with my parents briefly in between and, and I set up shop right there in their garage and I made it work. You know, it's like anything that was coming my way, I wasn't saying no to anything. And I was just like, all right, let's go. Let's, let's make this work. And, uh, you know, I can say that it hasn't always been easy, especially when.
I've tried to take like equipment on the road with me. That is the beautiful thing about it, right? Like if it's working remote, the work can then go with you wherever you want to be. So if I wanna go on vacation, I can go on vacation, I can be on a sunny beach in Florida and I can get the work done at the hotel.
Uh, but of course we were already having challenging things and my fiance's grandmother was sick and we were in Vermont. And I, I was just trying to get things set up at. Uh, my, my fiance's parents' house and like, could not get the settings right for whatever reason. Things didn't wanna work for me that day.
And I was so, so frustrated because we were already like, emotions high, right? And, uh. I think there was one show I just couldn't do. You know, the rest of it got done, but one show couldn't happen and I was like, man, this is not how this is supposed to work. But you know, again, this is like a lot of troubleshooting and this is a lot of learning and that is how the industry has changed.
You know, before I would've been just. Speak in words, and, uh, now I'm a little bit of everything and you can be too, but this, it makes it so there's so much more opportunity out there to be had and there's so much more money to be ba to be made. And, uh, you know, this just gives us some, some great, um, you know, wings to spread too.
You know, it's like before maybe it was just one style of work and that was what that studio did for you, whatever. And you know, now it's so much that could be on your plate at any given time. Um. You know, the sound quality tweaks, I will tell you can be very challenging. Uh, like, you know, it took me a minute to figure out what I had to do and, uh, you know, it really came down to some of the stupidest things.
You know, I, I've mentioned how like I have a wall in my studio that is simply cardboard boxes in a sheet. Uh, you would be be amazed at how much sound absorption, uh, that stuff does, but like you literally can every studio set up. That is remote, that is home, you will find is different. And I will look at some people's and I'm just like jealous of the equipment they got.
But I also am like, but I don't really need that. You know, that's money I don't really need to spend. Maybe one day, you know, maybe one day I'll upgrade myself a little bit and I'll go ahead and I'll, I'll bite the bullet. I'll get that. But I actually don't really need it. It's just like fun to look at. Uh, you know, but everyone is a little different.
For me, I, I kind of like my, my adult fort. It, it is, uh, my, my home, my home away from home. But it's actually within my home. You know? It's, it's where I am at the majority of my days. And, uh, you know, it's, it's me to a t So you gotta have a, a space that you feel good about. Um, you know, it's, it's the amount of work too that has also changed.
'cause I think what happened too, before, you know, a lot of businesses. It was like, all right, they would have a commercial maybe, um, you know, they would have a training video. Maybe they would have maybe some content for their web, maybe some content for in store or whatever. But you had a lot of businesses that all of a sudden they, they needed to do new training videos because, well, the work needed to be done in a different way.
Right? So all of a sudden we've got like, you know, an abundance of new training that needs to be voiced and, uh. You know, new commercials to be read because well, um, the, the storefront isn't open, but hey, you can check us out online and, uh, we want to make sure that you realize we're a part of the community and we hope that you and your loved ones are staying safe.
Like there was a lot of, um, togetherness, even though we were a part that was being. Pushed out into the airwaves. Um, you know, there was a lot more companies that were doing things like podcasts and that also needed certain elements to go along with it, that they were kind of troubleshooting along the way and would need, uh, different things voiced.
And, you know, it's amazing the things that came just across a, a very short amount of time and, and things that happened just so rapidly. Um, but. It's made it, so I think now, this many years later, you know, we're aware of capabilities, possibilities, and we're not scared of it either. Like, change is always scary, but we've seen what's possible and, and, um, the, the, the whole thing of like, you know.
Being able to work together and to troubleshoot and to make things happen. You know, it's like we've got a great. Community in voiceover to, to kind of lean on to, to make those things happen. And it's just, it's a really, really beautiful thing. Honestly. Um, you know, I am very privileged. I feel like, to work the way that I do.
Uh, you know, it allows for so much flexibility. It, it allows me to do. Everything that I love from the comfort of my home, I know that my puppy really, really, really loves it. She's asleep on the table next to me right now and, uh, you would never even know 'cause this is what she does. She gets in the studio, she gets on her blanket, she passes out.
And do you, you have no idea how happy that makes me, uh, you know, as a human. Um, 'cause uh, that was also something that wasn't really possible a whole lot before. Uh, but yeah, the, the world of voiceover, the world itself has changed and, uh, as much. As you know, we did hate that time of the COVID-19 pandemic.
I think that it has brought so much possibility to. Your voiceover career and mine. Um, so look, look at all the possibility and see where you wanna be and start taking those steps if you haven't already, to make some things happen for yourself. Any way that we can help. Whether you wanna be a part of the program, we can get some more [email protected].
Um. You know, we're always doing workshops. You can always, you know, save a few bucks if you use promo codes that are out there. And, uh, you know, if you've got questions, you can always bounce 'em off me as well of anything that you want discussed on the pod [email protected]. I hope that, uh, you know, you're feeling good as we're entering the summer months and I look forward to, you know, hearing what you guys gotta say at [email protected].
Uh, brand new episode is coming at you next week. Stay safe, everybody. Visit voice coaches.com for more voiceover news and information.
This week on Voice Coaches Radio, Marissa chats about how vastly the field has changed and grown and the positives of the last 5 years…