Donnachaidh wrote:Annachie wrote:It reads like he was attempting a joke on the recording team and it slipped through.
OK, maybe I'm being too nice.
Bluesqueak wrote:It could have been a joke, yeah, but what's deeply unprofessional is letting that joke get through to the final reader version. He was getting paid, dammit.
He was the reader not the audio engineer. If it was a joke that wasn't edited out, that's on the audio engineer not the reader.
The audio engineer doesn't have the script, or isn't reading it, at least. His job is to make sure recording levels are good, sound is clear, there are no slurred lines, etc. It is
not his job to check the reader's words against the printed page.
If it was intended as a joke, then it's on the
reader, and not his engineer.
Before I started selling novels, I spent a
lot of time in recording studios doing radio advertising. The engineer has more than enough on his plate without having to worry about stupid jokes/insertions by supposedly professional voice talent.
Whether it was a joke that was supposed to be edited out or intended to get through to the final product, it was deeply
unprofessional. In all the years that I did audio, I don't think I ever once had voice talent slip in a "joke" line. Sometimes entire sessions broke up into laughter and you had to start over because someone flubbed a line, but that's a very different situation.