![]() ![]() That said, I still remain humble and ever mindful from whence I came, always willing to help others and share whatever I can, whenever I can and however I can. Time to spend with my family and friends. I’m flush with the most valuable commodity in the world, which is Time. I often say to people that I’m wealthy, but not monetarily speaking. ![]() I have a client base that……well…….let’s just say I’ve had to hire someone to help me with it…LOL! The lifestyle VO affords me is fantastic, to do what you love and work from home – it doesn’t get any better than that. This was one of the top 3 TV Imaging gigs in the country. Schick : See- Schick, Herv and Rabassa, Serge, 368,664, Cl. I was the National Network Imaging voice for Global TV in Canada from 2006-2013. Today, I can honestly say I’ve surpassed the top of my game. Since then, I’ve helped about 30 people get their start in the voice over business. A behind-the-scenes view of production lines across the country to find out. So, I decided to start-up a small sideline of my business – consulting. Food Factory: With Colleen Rusholme, Todd Schick, Ashley Chapman, Ellen Gordon. Recording engineering, computer repair, website development, marketing, even some of the skills you’d find that of a General Contractor. I also found out that I’m one of very few that has expertise in running a voice-over business. Along with dramatically improving my voiceover talent skills, I found I wasn’t too bad at performing on the stage either. None were offering recording services.Īlong the way, I discovered a few skills I never knew I had, including – to my pleasant surprise – Acting. ![]() Back then, there was only about 30 guys listed on Yahoo! as a voiceover talent. I had my first website up in 1995 and started delivering audio from my home studio in 1998. I decided to build my own studio and establish a career as a freelance voiceover talent. Home Factory is nearly identical to the original series, except that its products are non-food items found in and around the home, ranging from towels and brooms to rubber ducks and lawn flamingos.So, I left the radio business to pursue my dream (and make better money). Home FactoryĪlso in May 2015, a true spinoff began airing in the U.S. As aired in the U.S., the fourth season of Food Factory has no metric units of any kind (narration, graphics, or captions), but the closed captioning still uses Canadian spelling. Those seasons, as seen on Food Network (Canada) (as well in the United States as FYI and its predecessor, Bio), used metric measurements in the narration, with the FYI broadcasts also including metric with English conversions in the graphics. In the FYI telecasts, Food Factory USA also uses only English units, instead of the metric system measurements used in the original three Food Factory seasons. The only noticeable difference is the use of graphical text in various colors (consistent within each episode), instead of the silvery grey used in all four previous seasons of the two series. In the spring of 2015, a second season began airing on May 23, two at a time each week as with season four of Food Factory. In addition, each break is preceded by a trivia question related to the segment, whose answer is given following the break (similar to other series such as Pawn Stars). However, the format is somewhat different, catering to the demands of American programmers by eliminating one of the four segments to make room for more TV commercials, and putting those commercials in the middle of each of the three remaining segments instead of between them. The style of the show, including the theme music, text graphics, and two narrators, is identical to the original three seasons of Food Factory. Between the original program's third and fourth seasons, the first season of Food Factory USA was produced for FYI and featured only U.S. ![]()
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