|
Please login to reply.
|
|||||
|
Posted at 27/10/2010, 21:55
|
|||||
| do you guys know the us announcer is an aussie? | |||||
|
Posted at 27/10/2010, 23:00
|
|||||
|
this is why i love globalization. if they air an episode anywhere in the world, i can get it. i don't think i'll have a problem with a brit accent. i watch a lot of bbc shows. |
|||||
|
Posted at 28/10/2010, 01:12
|
|||||
the irony is that the us guy who does the voice over, lives in sydney, australia. |
|||||
|
Posted at 28/10/2010, 01:16
|
|||||
actually, he was born in the uk, grew up in the us and now lives in australia. |
|||||
|
Posted at 28/10/2010, 22:42
|
|||||
|
ugh i hate this announcer! does anyone know when the us version will be released? [edit] nm, according to the mythbusters website, it's november 3. why??? |
|||||
|
Posted at 04/11/2010, 10:18
|
|||||
|
these complaints about this narrator's accent is probably a direct indicator of the cultural diversity in the complainers area. |
|||||
|
Posted at 11/11/2010, 19:46
|
|||||
|
of course, the fact that they re-air these shows in the uk and change nothing but the narrator's voice is probably a direct indicator that the uk is just as xenophobic as north america is. qed. |
|||||
|
Posted at 16/11/2010, 11:15
|
|||||
|
that's true, they do change the "narrator's voice". a pretty neutral yet distinctively local dialect is nearly always the key factor in the safe choice of a narrator. celebrities are exempt from this rule. but i see a lot more complaints about the uk narrator than his us counterpart from people who, i'm assuming from their grasp of the english language, are probably from na. we know the british empire once spanned the globe with about a quarter of it's population under it's control so it's no wonder that in london, for example, it would be hard to find any culture that is not represented. |
|||||