0584 – How To Be An Auto-Cutie 3

2022.08.07– 0584 – How To Be An Auto-Cutie 3  Look at the lens·        Keep looking the camera lens ‘in the eye’ in the same way as you’d look at someone if they were in the room with you. That doesn’t mean a stare or a glare, but with a natural ease (one of interested, informed involvement) alongside occasional glances at your paper-notes or maybe a colleague or monitor. Not only will this make you look conversational, because you will be emulating the style of face-to-face interaction, it will also help you sound conversational too.  Relax ·        Keep your head, neck, and shoulders relaxed. Let your head move naturally, with small movements up and down left and right so you don’t appear to be staring. Some people look down at a desk script occasionally to keep up the ‘pretence’ of having committed the story to memory. As well as helping you look and feel more natural, it’ll help reduce stress around your neck and shoulders. ·        Smile and gesticulate (within reason!). Obviously, this depends on the context and content of what you’re saying, but don’t be a statue.·        Consider (with permissions) putting in ‘natural’ pauses or hesitations to make the presentation sound more authentic.The prompter may be just that, a prompt·        If you just ‘read the words’ you may come across as inauthentic and disengaged from the actual content. Try and avoid the ‘glazed-over glare’ look.·        The key is to use the prompter to sound conversational. Again, where allowed by a director, use natural habits we do as we talk to each other face-to-face: look up or down to ‘gather your thoughts’, use those natural instinctive gestures. ·        Don’t necessarily feel as though you have to read every single word. To be clear, on a TV news bulletin you will have to because of timings, fluency and accuracy, but if you have a prompter for a livestream show then you can afford to adlib around the bullet points that are on screen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Om Podcasten

Year THREE of short daily episodes to improve the quality of your speaking voice.Through these around-5-minute episodes, you can build your confidence and competence with advice on breathing and reading, inflection and projection, the roles played by better scripting and better sitting, mic techniques and voice care tips... with exercises and anecdotes from a career spent in TV and radio studios. If you're wondering about how to start a podcast, or have had one for a while - download every episode!And as themes develop over the weeks (that is, they are not random topics day-by-day), this is a free, course to help you GET A BETTER BROADCAST, PODCAST AND VOICE OVER VOICE.Look out for more details of the book during 2024.Contacts: https://linktr.ee/Peter_StewartAudio recording script and show notes (c) 2021, 2022, 2023 Peter StewartPeter has been around voice and audio all his working life and has trained hundreds of broadcasters in all styles of radio from pop music stations such as Capital FM and BBC Radio 1, the classical music station BBC Radio 3 and regional BBC stations. He’s trained news presenters on regional TV, the BBC News Channel and on flagship programmes such as the BBC’s Panorama. He has written a number of books on audio and video presentation and production (see contacts clink above) and presented hundreds of radio shows (you may have heard him on BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 4, Virgin Radio or Kiss, as well as BBC regional radio) with various formats. He has read tens of thousands of news bulletins and hosted 3,000+ podcast episodes.The podcast title refers to those who may wish to change their speaking voice in some way. It is not a suggestion that anyone should, or be pressured into needing to. We love accents and dialects, and are well aware that how we speak changes over time. The key is: is your voice successfully communicating your message, so it is being understood (and potentially being acted upon) by your target audience?This podcast is London-based and examples are spoken in the RP (Received Pronunciation) / standard-English / BBC English pronunciation, although invariably applicable to other languages, accents and dialects.The 'Peter Stewart' show is perhaps of great interest to those in broadcast voice overs, the broadcast voice, how to start a voice podcast, broadcasting voice training, your speaking voice, breathing technique, and conversational speaking. You may also find it useful if you are searching for information on voice coaching, voice training, voice overs, podcasting, broadcasting, presenting, being a voice over actor and newsreading, audio branding, public speaking, the recorded voice, vocal tips, performance, vocal health education, vocal technique and voice over training.Music credits: all Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license "Beauty Flow" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5025-beauty-flow Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.