Clubhouse Recap: Joe Cipriano on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

A graphic illustration showing a screenshot of Clubhouse with Marc Guss and Joe Cipriano's photos, their names appear in the lower right side of the image along with the words Thank You. The logo for Alexis Pellek voiceover also appears.

Huge thanks to Marc Guss and his guest tonight on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club, Joe Cipriano! Joe talked about all things promo, and the renowned VO artist, demo producer, and consultant listened to a lot of fantastic reads from the audience and gave great advice.

We heard promos for shows like Unikitty, Doc McStuffins, and LEGO Masters, and Joe’s direction and guidance included tips such as:

  • Use the music as a cue to how you should deliver your reads.
  • When thinking about animation promos, “You have to push and dig deep, but don’t get pukey.” There’s a line between fun/hokey and going to far to where it just sounds wrong and way too overemphasized.
  • One good way to research is to find videos of James Arnold Taylor’s work — “he’s over the top, it’s a bit hokey, and he’s hitting it perfectly.”
  • Doing promo research in general on YouTube or iSpot is great to understand the style. Just search for network + promo to get the idea.
  • Being able to switch between two styles of performance is an important skill to have.
  • “Ladies, work on your promo reads!” He said that networks are looking for new voices and more women when it comes to promos.

I loved hearing the feedback on all the reads. As Marc said, “Keep taking chances because that’s how you break through here.”

Thanks so much to Marc and Joe for their awesome feedback and conversation, and for everyone who read tonight!

In addition, Marc announced that he is donating proceeds of his upcoming book now through March 15 to UNICEF to help families in Ukraine.

Clubhouse Recap: The Working Voice Actor’s Game Day! Bad Direction

Today’s session of The Working Voice Actor on Clubhouse with George Nowik, Roshelle Simpson & Megan Selke was a fun one! Because it was the last Friday of the month, that meant it was Game Day, and today the topic was bad direction.

The brave VOs who took the stage were asked to read some short copy — it could be from anything you happen to have within reach — and then were given silly, obscure, crazy direction for their second take. Everyone did an excellent job interpreting the bizarre wishes of the fictional directors, and we heard interesting reads of things like:

  • ingredients for caramel rice cakes
  • the label from a gift soap set
  • proofing instructions for a pizza dough recipe

It was the copy about the pole greaser in New Orleans that seriously confused everyone (turns out it’s a Mardi Gras tradition). I may have been laughing out loud in the grocery store at that point.

Thank you to George, Roshelle, and Megan for organizing this space, and thanks to everyone who contributed to the discussion! I’m looking forward to the next one, and I hope to see you there: Fridays on Clubhouse at 9am PST/noon EST.

Clubhouse Recap: Julia Schoeffling on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

A graphic illustration shows a screenshot of the Clubhouse room for the Marc Guss Voiceover Club, with the profile images for Marc Guss and Julia Schoeffling. The words Thank You appear on the upper right, and the names Julia Schoeffling and Marc Guss on the lower right. The logo for Alexis Pellek Voice Over appears in the upper left of the graphic.

Huge thanks to Marc Guss and his guest tonight on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club, Julia Bianco Schoeffling! Julia shared a bit about her background working in the video game industry, and how it prepared her for the role of co-founder and COO of the Halp Network, which connects creative professionals in the entertainment industry.

Julia and Marc offered really valuable advice to the many people who read scripts and showed off their characters. Here’s just some of the insights and tips that we heard tonight:

–On slowing down your performance for video games, Julia said, “For games, you can slow it down — milk it. For animation it’s more fast paced, but for video games we want a more grounded performance.”

–We heard several really excellent reads for characters in fantasy games. Julia said, “There’s a demand for fantasy accents, such as in Zelda Breath of the Wild, where it’s not not quite British, not quite Irish but an interesting accent.” She said to think Lord of the Rings or The Princess Bride as archetypes.

–Putting a nonverbal effort at the top of a line is a good way to distinguish your performance from the hundreds that casting directors hear for each role.

–About improv: Julia said that it is a great skill to have as an actor. In an audition, she recommends to “just pepper it in,” don’t overdo it. She added that when you’re booked for the job, you’ll know how receptive they are to it as you work with them.

Look for Julia’s upcoming book, called The Art and Business of Acting for Video Games, coming out this April/May. Sign up for her newsletter to find out when the pre-order date is available.

Thanks so much to Marc and Julia for their awesome feedback and conversation, and for everyone who read tonight!

Clubhouse Recap: The Working Voice Actor and Reels

A graphic illustration says "The working voice actor with george nowik, roshelle simpson & megan selke" and the words "Reels: Yay or Nay" which was the topic of this discussion. On the left is a screenshot of the clubhouse room called the Working Voice Actor. In the lower right is the logo for Alexis Pellek Voice Over.

In Friday’s session of The Working Voice Actor on Clubhouse with George Nowik, Roshelle Simpson & Megan Selke, the topic was reels. Do you make them? What platform do you use? What kind of hashtags do you use, and how many? What’s been the response to your reels so far?

Personally, I had nothing to contribute to this discussion because I have not tried anything like this. Someone early on in the conversation said something like, “Explain this to me like I’m a grandma who doesn’t understand this at all, but also explain it like I’m 3.” That’s the category that I fall into regarding reels, or, the short videos that appear on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube (as Shorts), and perhaps some other places? Like I said, I’m all like reels what ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

A few things that I learned:

  • Keep it short: 7-15 seconds seems to be the ideal length that the algorithms will push out.
  • Our attention span is about 8 seconds, according to recent research that was mentioned in the discussion.
  • If you create a video on TikTok, for example, do not try to post it elsewhere if it has a TikTok logo on it because that other platform will not like it.
  • Don’t use too many hashtags.

One point that everyone agreed on is to make content because you enjoy doing it. If you’re forcing yourself to do something just for the sake of having something to post, that’s going to show. So just go for it and have fun!

And on that note, the mods issued a challenge for the week: create a reel, post it, and see what happens! Tag George, Roshelle, and Megan, and try to use the hashtag #theworkingvoiceactor so we can all find it and enjoy it.

Thank you to George, Roshelle, and Megan for organizing this space, and thanks to everyone who contributed to the discussion! I’m looking forward to the next one, and I hope to see you there: Fridays on Clubhouse at 9am PST/noon EST.

Clubhouse Recap: Dave Walsh on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

Huge thanks to Marc Guss and his guest on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club last night, Dave Walsh! Dave is a respected VO talent, coach, and creator of the TrueTell™ Method. With 32 years in the business as a talent working in nearly every VO genre, and 14 years as a coach, Dave’s credentials are evident right from the start of the conversation.

Dave shared an interesting part of his background when he talked about how after a vocal injury, a coach told him that he was using his voice inauthentically. As he worked with a speech pathologist, he learned that he was trying to artificially create voices instead of using his true voice. Dave realized that this wasn’t only a problem that actors face – it can affect anyone. We use different aspects of our voice depending on who we are talking to, for example.

Dave spent four years working as an apprentice with a doctor to understand this more deeply, and he developed his coaching program that lets him hear right away when someone is speaking inauthentically. What a level of dedication to gain this kind of understanding of the human voice!

As Marc pointed out, Dave’s journey took him here, to teach people authenticity in this business, adding “authenticity is inescapable” and it’s what people want.

Dave said that the client is looking for a point of view, not just a nice voice. And when you audition, “you’re sending in your own opinion and not worrying about the way your voice sounds.” He added that they don’t just want the pretty voice, they want the story, and that “your sound just supports your point of view.”

We listened as people read their commercial copy for Dave and he guided them to that place of authenticity. He encouraged readers to personalize the copy for themselves, to find a way to connect to it, and hearing the transformations in people’s performances was incredible!

One note that he gave to several people was that when you trip on words, it’s a red flag that you aren’t connected to the script. That can be a chance to reset and start again.

Marc had a great way of summing up the evening by saying, “Success in the VO industry is a combo of authentic read, confidence, luck, a break here and there…and working with Dave Walsh.”

And although I was having technical problems with Clubhouse and wasn’t able to join the stage, I still enjoyed listening to Dave’s insights and everyone’s reads. I had planned to ask Dave a question, and I’ll ask it here for him or anyone reading to answer:

“Can you talk about some turning points or moments when things clicked for you? It may have been a piece of advice you got or maybe a certain insight you gained from a job, coach, or student, for example…?”

Feel free to leave your answer below!

I had the pleasure of meeting Dave several months ago when I was a part of the Top 40 Callback for the CBS Audition Spotlight held by the Society of Voice Arts and Sciences and Dave was the lead judge. It was a great experience and I appreciated his kindness and humor. I hope to work with him in the future!

Thanks so much to Marc and Dave for the amazing conversation, and for the insightful audience questions that furthered the discussion! Check out the Marc Guss Voiceover Club every Wednesday night on Clubhouse at 8:30 pm ET.

Clubhouse Recap: The Working Voice Actor & Evil Alter Egos

A graphic illustration showing a screenshot from CLubhouse room for The Working Voice Actor. An image of a devil next to the words Evil Alter Ego Time appears in the lower center, and the logo for Alexis Pellek Voice Over appears in the lower right.

Friday’s session of The Working Voice Actor on Clubhouse with George Nowik, Roshelle Simpson & Megan Selke was another fun way to spend some time on Friday: it was Evil Alter Ego Time! We were invited to bring our worst selves and let it all out — anything bothering you, the stuff you wish you could say to clients, the brutal honesty that you wish you could share but know that you shouldn’t, etc. All variations of that kind of venting led to some hilarious rants!

Thank you to George, Roshelle, and Megan for organizing this space, and thanks to everyone who contributed to the discussion! I’m looking forward to the next one, and I hope to see you there: Fridays on Clubhouse at 9am PST/noon EST.

Clubhouse Recap: Marc Preston on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

Huge thanks to Marc Guss and his guest on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club tonight, Marc Preston! Marc Preston is a VO talent, coach, founder of the VoiceOver Community Club on CH, and founder of The Voiceover Community on Facebook (with a membership just shy of 23K!)

Marc Preston is known for being a kind and helpful source of information to people of all levels of voiceover talent. He says, “It’s like raising a child; I made all the mistakes so you don’t have to.”

When the idea of “getting rich quick in voiceover” came up, he pointed out that, of course, it doesn’t work that way, but that he could understand why people may get that impression. With a combination of the low cost of entry equipment-wise, the promise of tons of auditions on pay-to-play sites, and the sales tactics of some unscrupulous coaches and demo producers out there, he says he gets it.

The bottom line, he says, is that if you’re looking for a side hustle, look elsewhere. VO is a craft, and if you’re passionate about it, if can be a profitable hobby, but if you won’t find success without putting in the training and the years of experience.

Marc & Marc talked about the importance of being adaptable as a voice talent. “Don’t lock yourself into one genre,” says Marc Preston. “Be willing to explore other genres.”

Marc Guss wants to see someone who is open to all the different aspects of the business, and to genres outside of their specialty. “It’s a volume game,” he says, and 2022 and beyond is not the time to pick and choose which audition you try for.

As Marc Preston said, “Be open to happy surprises.”

He also shared with us his four C’s:

  • Craft
  • Capable (to bring script to life)
  • Consistency
  • Confidence, which he says is probably the core principle for his coaching

“Confidence lets you manage your nerves like a Jedi, hopefully,” Marc Preston says.

He also shared the two most powerful words, and this goes for on camera or voiceover auditions: “fuck it.” He says to give it your best and don’t stress about it. Let it go. He believes that negative self-talk is a real issue, and something you should avoid.

One of his favorite quotes is from Sanford Meisner: “Act before you think, your instincts are more honest than your thoughts.” He also invoked Al Franken’s SNL character Stuart Smalley, saying, “You’re good enough, you’re smart enough, and doggone it, people like you!”

Fellow quote lover Debra Stitt took the stage and shared one of her favorites: “Until it’s my turn, I will keep clapping for others happily.”

And Marc Preston offered another gem: “What you do speaks so loudly that I cannot hear what you say,” by Ralph Waldo Emerson.

The conversation wrapped up with Marc Guss echoing the many thanks that tonight’s speakers expressed for Marc Preston’s willingness to help others and share his knowledge with the community.

“People recognize you as a genuinely nice person – you have something nice inside you that just radiates,” Marc Guss said.

Marc Preston said that he is happy to have a positive impact on the VO world, and added that he avoids a snarky, acidic vibe because negativity chips away at your subconscious and the work that you try to do. He sticks with positivity because “it’s going to spill over onto you, too.”

Thanks so much to Marc and Marc for the amazing conversation, and for the insightful audience questions that furthered the discussion!

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Clubhouse Recap: The Working Voice Actor & Social Media Content

Today’s edition of The Working Voice Actor with George Nowik, Roshelle Simpson, and Megan Selke was a blast! The question of the day was about creating content for social media: what do you do, where, why, is it working? I joined the stage along with many others to contribute to the discussion, and while I can’t claim to have the answers to all those questions, what I can say that it was nice to share in the discussion and feel the amazing support of this group!

We talked about the “perfection paralysis,” or “analysis paralysis,” that can sometimes prevent us from putting ourselves out there. One thing that was great about this bunch of folks is the encouragement and support that was shared to just go for it! Whatever idea you have floating in your head, just try it! Show it to the world and share that part of yourself!

Thank you to George, Roshelle, and Megan for organizing this space, and thanks to everyone who contributed to the discussion! I’m looking forward to the next one, and I hope to see you there: Fridays on Clubhouse at 9am PST/noon EST.

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Clubhouse recap: Jeff Bell on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

Huge thanks to Marc Guss and his guest on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club last night, Jeff Bell! Jeff has been the voice of Ford for 20 years, and last night talked about his first career in radio before getting into VO.

We learned that Jeff doesn’t follow trends, and he focuses on being himself. His authenticity comes across because stays true to who he is, and says that “even as a DJ, I wanted to be the guy sitting in his living room, playing records, and talking about weird shit.” As a voiceover artist, he always tries to being some levity in the studio, and to be fun to be around. “I’m a rock and roll DJ and that’s how I approach life,” Jeff says.

His work in radio has given him an innate sense of timing that serves him well in the voiceover world. I loved his suggestion for anyone to practice improving their sense of timing with an electric toothbrush. If your brush has a sequence of four 30-second cycles for example, try to get a sense of what 30 seconds feels like by trying to predict when those cycles will stop. For him, he knows that he’s a bit hyper or a bit slow that day based on how ahead or behind the timer he guesses.

Moving from having a sense of time to focusing on the body, I loved the care and thoughtfulness that Jeff puts into his physical and mental health, and the time he has spent learning his instrument. “You cannot neglect your physical health. It’s the most important thing you can do to maintain your business,” he says.

His daily routine of singing as loud as he can stretches out his ribs, opens up his chest, and warms up his diaphragm and lungs. He discussed how he can’t reach certain parts of his register after he eats, so he has found that eating once a day in the evening works for him. Even the way he half-sits on a bar stool and arches his back to reach the “really nasty low notes” is something that he has discovered about himself and incorporated into his craft. As Marc said, “You know the intricacies of your body.”

And in terms of promotion and hustle online, Jeff says, “If you feel like social media is wearing you out, pull off the road for a bit and take a minute. Take care of the most important asset: you.”

Jeff’s laid-back confidence was a refreshing contrast to the neurotic hamster wheel of doubt that my brain sometimes gets stuck in. What I took away from what Jeff shared is that he knows who he is, what he’s capable of, and what he’s worth. I think it takes a combination of experience and of paying attention to oneself in order to learn and grow to that level. This is something I will try to be more mindful of going forward.

Thanks so much to Marc and Jeff for the amazing conversation, and for the insightful audience questions that furthered the discussion!

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Clubhouse recap: Jason Sasportas on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club

Big thanks to Marc Guss and his guest on the Marc Guss Voiceover Club last night, Jason Sasportas. Jason is an agent and head of voiceover for Stewart Talent, and he talked about commercial voiceover representation. Jason and Marc gave great direction and advice to all who took the stage to read scripts — thanks to everyone who read so that we in the audience could benefit from the experience!

a graphic illustration with the words Thank You and a screenshot of a Clubhouse room featuring Marc Guss and Jason Sasportas. Their names are also featured in a text box. The logo for Alexis Pellek Voice Over appears in the top left.

Some advice during the session was:

  • Understand the subtleties of the copy. If you give a second take in your audition, stay within the specs and just lean into the subtle differences. Take somewhat of a chance, but don’t go overboard. Also, avoid doing an identical read on take 2 — make them different. Both going overboard and not changing anything in your second take can hurt your chances.
  • If you have a short script that’s only a line or two, consider submitting two takes. Marc and Jason said that sometimes just one read isn’t enough to go on.
  • When someone’s script consisted of a message that a boss was leaving on an employee’s voicemail, that gave Marc an idea: Try practicing a read as if you were leaving a message for someone, because that’s the real you. It will be more authentic, Jason and Marc said.

Thanks so much to Marc and Jason for this amazing learning experience, and bravo to everyone who read last night!

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