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Kimlinh Tran (born December 12, [1] 1989), [2] also known by the online pseudonym Hnilmik, is an American voice actor from California.She [a] has done voice work for various anime and video games, as well as several online anime parody fandubs, most notably as Chi-Chi in TeamFourStar's Dragon Ball Z Abridged.
There has been a shift to online voice over casting in recent years. With many professional voice talent utilizing home studios, [1] clients are able to cut out traditional bricks and mortar agents. Websites devoted exclusively to pre-screened professional voice over talent are servicing international clients often faster and cheaper than the ...
Voice-over (also known as off-camera or off-stage commentary) is a production technique used in radio, television, filmmaking, theatre, and other media in which a descriptive or expository voice that is not part of the narrative (i.e., non-diegetic) accompanies the pictured or on-site presentation of events. [1]
Miyake felt as if he was Tsume's father, "kindly watching over him" and he used those feelings to guide the way he depicted the character. [4] Hige (ヒゲ, lit. "Whiskers") Voiced by: Akio Suyama (Japanese); Joshua Seth (English, Bandai Visual dub) [2] Hige is a Mexican wolf and the third wolf character to be introduced in the series. He seems ...
An agent has two sets of clients: the "talent" (actors, models, voice-over artists, bands, musicians, stand-up comedians, dancers etc.) and the "buyer". The buyer can be a casting director, advertising agency, production company, photographer, or direct client if the client has an "in-house" production staff. Agents promote talent to the buyers ...
Snoop Dogg. Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for Godfather Entertainment Get that red chair ready, because Snoop Dogg is excited to join The Voice. On Monday, May 13, NBC announced that the rapper, 52 ...
Cho was born to South Korean parents in Minnesota on December 9, 1990, [5] [6] and later moved to DeWitt, Michigan. [7] He started voice acting in high school when he voiced different characters on a friend's radio plays. [8]
Jeon Woo-chi: The Taoist Wizard (Korean: 전우치; also known as Woochi: The Demon Slayer, is a 2009 South Korean fantasy action comedy film written and directed by Choi Dong-hoon [2] departs from his popular heist films Tazza: The High Rollers and The Big Swindle for this big-budget, special effects-filled action romp that was equally popular with the Korean audience, earning over six ...