Looking for a Male Voice Over for CineCap Channel
Rshin for Male Voice Over for CineCap Channel
Production states: \"We’d love it if you’d be able to make at least four-six voice overs week. We expect a 24h turnaround time. The script length will range from 1,000 - 2,000 words.
Things to note: Topics will vary therefore please match that tone accordingly (most will be heartwarming topics). Be soft spoken. You must be able to use a storytelling tone that is engaging. Emphasize some words emotionally where needed but most should be from an outside perspective. Avoid jerks while reading and use clear pronunciation.
Use a professional microphone so we can see the quality of your output. Do not sound commercial.
Trial Script:
Just then, the principal announces the queen and king: Madison comes to the stage gladly, but Wesley isn’t sure about it. Finally, he goes over to kiss Bianca in front of everyone. They leave to go hook up in the computer room. That’s when she gets an idea for the article: she writes about being a DUFF, and the article is a hit with the students. Several students read it and realize they’re DUFFs, too. Even Mr. Arthur admits to Bianca he was a DUFF.
Bianca’s article triggers a lot of positive response from people who can relate to her story. She then tells the viewers that she and Wesley are a couple, and that they will be visiting each other a lot as they’re going to neighboring colleges. The film ends with Bianca and Wesley driving to dinner, to the dark booth in the restaurant Wesley was recommending to Bianca earlier."
Edited comment: I hope none of you pursue this project cause it looks shady--the standard for Voice Acting is $0.25 per word, you'd get probably $0.03 per word for *always having a minimum of 1000 words per script*. Add insult to injury, you'd do 4-6 scripts a week, let's say 5 times for argument's sake--5 scripts x 1000 words each = 5000 words a week; all while being underpaid.
Okay? And?
Its just that people auditioning for this role will have to do 4 weeks, 6 scripts per week with each having a 24-hour turn around, before they see $750. If you understood that from the get-go, sorry, my bad.
Noone ever ends up cast, so why should I care that the money ill never make from a thing ill never do isnt enough for your standards?
If you're okay with earning that much, that's perfectly fine, but I literally tried to get this up here so that people would be informed incase they didn't realize --I'm not dense, its not simply my standards, its industry standards.