Voice Over Insider – Q&A with Beau Weaver

 Welcome to the Voice Over Insider Interview Series.

In these interviews we’ll attempt to go beyond the typical questions and get to the real performer behind the microphone, and bring you their insights from an educational point of view.

This week:

Beau Weaver Interview
Media – Web/Internet
www.minewurx.com – A voice over training website.
Interviewer: Michael Minetree

Beau Weaver and his Manley Microphone

Beau Weaver in the Voice Over Studio

 

So here we are, an interview that I have wanted to do since before I knew how to type, and the jury is still out on that ability. Seriously though, one of the first voice over related web pages I stumbled across back in the good old days before every TD&H had a web page about voice over training and techniques, this man was up on the net before the rest of us.

I recall coming across his site and when digging for more information, discovered, not only was he a good VO, he was a really good VO, and has since become one of the people I most highly recommend when it comes to how new voice talent might want to set the bar for themselves if they are looking to achieve what I feel to be the most well-rounded type of success in this business; The kind where one doesnt chase constant celebrity and simply exists amidst their success while remaining grounded enough to still offer guidance and a helping hand to those who wish to some day nip at his ankles in this occupation.

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you, the most versatile voice over talent in the business, hands down, Beau Weaver.

You will not find another talent who spans as much media. You will not find another talent with more wide ranging credits to their name, and you simply wont find a talent with more creative delivery ability than this man here

1) Does that about sum it up Beau?

You make me sound like a FEDEX guy with a bad FICA Score.

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Voice Over Insider – Q&A with Joe Cipriano

Welcome to the Voice Over Insider Interview Series.

In these interviews we’ll attempt to go beyond the typical questions and get to the real performer behind the microphone, and bring you their insights from an educational point of view.

This week:

Joe Cipriano Interview
Media – Web/Internet
www.minewurx.com – A voice over training website.
Interviewer: Michael Minetree

 

Joe Cipriano

Joe Cipriano

 

Joe – or Cip – if I may call you that – let me start this off the way I always do by saying thank you for taking the time out of your schedule – which we all know is one of the busiest in VO- to participate in this interview. Lord knows you didn’t have to do it, which makes it that much more special that you did.

There are some things about your career and your performance ability which fascinate me. We’ll start with the career side of things first. Your radio career is one of the better documented ones – many interviews can be found on your website – as well as on the net. So I’ll try my hardest not to make a repeat. But I can’t help hit it just a little with this:

Take us back in time – You started off as a jock – in the radio sense of the term – when you were just a kid really. A junior in high school? Did you ever, in your wildest of fantasies back then, dream that you would end up where you are today? Or did radio just seem like a cool thing to do at the time?

Growing up in a small town, I didn’t have many options to start a career in television or acting or whatever it was I was going to end up doing in the business. My dreams were to be in a sitcom or host a tv show and the only way I could start on that path locally was to get into radio. At the same time, I did community theater but I always thought radio was going to be the medium that would move me forward.

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The importance of quality sound as applied to ISDN, including comments by Joe Cipriano

I had a session scheduled yesterday with a large national client (MTV/Viacom). The session was one of those “maybe Monday or Tuesday” type bookings and when the client is of that nature, you make both days available to them. Comes with the territory. Anyway, it should have been as simple as: client sends copy, dials in on the ISDN line, talent reads copy, takes direction, reads copy again, studio in New York records talent, session ends…Everyone’s happy… It should have been that simple, but at 2:05 in the afternoon, I found myself thinking that had this day taken place earlier in my career, I probably would have cried…
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