Hearts2Hearts & The Problem With Young Idols
Project Overview
Hey there! I’m working on a K-pop commentary video that discusses the shocking reality of how young some idols are debuting—so young, in fact, that some are dropping out of middle school to chase stardom.
The video focuses on SM Entertainment’s new girl group, Hearts2Hearts, and the growing concern around the lack of education for young trainees in the industry. It’s a fun, casual script that still dives into an important and kinda wild topic. The tone should be friendly, easy to follow, and engaging—like you're chatting with a friend, not giving a lecture.
The full script is already written and ready to go. I just need the right voice to bring it to life!
If you enjoy K-pop, commentary content, or just want to help tell this story in an impactful but relatable way, I’d love to hear your audition.
Thanks so much for considering!
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Looking for a female voice actor to narrate a K-pop commentary video titled “Hearts2Hearts & The Problem With Young Idols.” The tone should feel conversational, fun, and easy to listen to—like you’re talking to a friend, not reading a news report. Think casual YouTube commentary style, with natural pacing and a little personality.
K-pop knowledge is appreciated but not required. Just be able to sound genuinely engaged and relatable!
This is the lead voice in the video. You will be the only speaker.
Requirements:
- Clean mic quality (no background noise, minimal processing)
- Friendly, clear, and natural-sounding voice
- Okay with light improv if something feels off or unnatural
- english
- female young adult
- fun
- causal
- all american accents
- conversational
- entertaining
- natural
- relatable
- friendly
- warm
- engaging
- Not boring
- good pacing
- Commentary
- Improv if needed
- YouTube-style
Hearts2Hearts has eight members. Out of those eight, only two actually made it past middle school. Carmen is one of them, and she eventually got her GED through homeschooling after she dropped out of high school. Stella is the other one who dropped out of high school instead of middle school. Everyone else? Didn’t even finish the 9th grade. That’s wild.
And the youngest members of the group? They’re around 15 years old. That means they either just barely started high school or never even got to that point. That’s like being a freshman and deciding, “You know what? I'm done. I’m gonna be famous.”
And like…why even debut kids so young in the first place? What’s the rush? The industry acts like if you’re not famous by 16, your life is over.
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