Look, prophecies aren't in my job description, OK?

Elie Hirschman's Blog: Rhymes, Reasonings and Ruminations from beyond normal.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

New FMF for Hallereen!

Available for download at http://darkerprojects.com/fiveminutefears.html:
Five Minute Fears #9: Masks

It is a typical Halloween in a small, rural Illinois town. But when a pair of unusual visitors come looking for treats from a very ordinary couple, they get more than they bargained for.

(6:15, 6.7 MB mp3, released 2006.10.31)

Written by Mark Kalita

Featured in the cast are:

Garry Cobbum as Mr. Ted Griffin
Victoria Sampson as Mrs. Marjorie Griffin
Draven Schoberg as Kid 1
Caira Greenfield as Kid 2
Mark Bruzee as Radio Announcer
Elie Hirschman as Visitor 1
Chris Snyder as Visitor 2

Five Minute Fears #8: Every Step of the Way

(4:18, 4 MB mp3, released 2006.10.31)

Written by Miles Reid

Featuring the voice talents of Elie Hirschman as David and The Voice.

The series is created and produced by Paul Mannering and Chris Snyder
Post-production by Paul Mannering
The executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby

Five Minute Fears #7: The Codger's Tale

(5:48, 5.4 MB mp3, released 2006.10.31)

Written by Paul Mannering

Featured in the cast are:

Emilie Leadley was Tina
Matt McLaren was Boyd
Josh DeLioncourt was The Barman
Timm Gillick was Charlie
Amanda Fitzwater was Rachel
Brandon Cole was The Codger
Damaris Mannering was The Waitress
Chris Thomson was Jimmy

Friday, October 27, 2006

S31: the Final Season Begins!

Star Trek: The Section 31 Files
Season 3 (the final season) begins!
03.01 Escape from Rura Penthe, Part 1

Rura Penthe. The notorious penal planetoid. A harsh, cruel ball of ice inhabited by the galaxy's most hardened criminals. Apart from James T. Kirk, those who enter never leave and all who attempt to die trying. Takila Mak, [arguably] Section 31's greatest operative, discovers retirement from 31 is not an option when he finds himself abducted and imprisoned in this frozen hell. What powerful force can orchestrate even the legendary Novachron Sentinel's capture...and why?

(26:40, 24.4 MB, released 2006.10.25)
Written by Mark Kalita

Featured in the cast were
Mark Kalita as Mak
Dave Sobowjak as the Klingons
Paul Mannering as Orso
Elie Hirschman as Tom Backus and Gorm
Damaris Mannering as Suma
Dan Gorgone as Branus
Bill Hollweg as Korjeel
Shane Harris as the Klingon Judge
And Eric Busby as the prisoner

Directed by Mark Kalita
Produced by Eric Busby
Post production by Eric Busby

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Kids these days

Case Yorke speaks the truth. Kids are less active than ever these days - what with the world wired interweb and video games and tellyvision and all manner of newfangled inventions- and so limiting the ways in which they can actually get out and exercise is ludicrous. Kids can get hurt just walking! You can't shield them from all things, all the time.
For whatever reason - busy parents, increased lawsuits, increased incidence of allergies and the depletion of the ozone layer- kids are less likely to actually DO stuff. Especially OUTSIDE. Tagging on (pun intended) these rules about what activities are verboten is just going to discourage physical activity, which kids need. Stuff which is overtly dangerous, like fence climbing, rock baseball, or rolling down steep hills in rusty barrels, OK. That's common sense stuff. But, outlawing tag? What's next, banning Rock/Paper/Scissor because someone might get a bruise/a papercut/slashed?
Let kids play. Injuries will happen, but we can all just remember that kids heal remarkably well, and maybe take the lawyer off of speed dial. My son got bashed in the nose by a kid in his daycare yesterday- needed 2 stitches. But you know what? All kids take their share of lumps over the course of their childhood. I'm not suing the daycare - they do the best they can, watching all these kids. I'm not suing the parents - I happen to know them and they are fine people. I'm not going to have the kid arrested - she's 2, for the love of Eve!!

So once again, America puts another notch in the list of examples where we're just way too uptight. Maybe a nice rousing game of Kill the Carrier will mellow everyone out.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

XM and Spoken Network!

Hi Guys,
The horror anthology "Night Terrors" will be appearing on XM Satellite radio starting next week Wednesday through Friday, and then the week after Monday through Friday.
I have been involved in the writing, acting and producing of this series and am very excited to be featured on XM!

The times are East coast:
2:30AM, 10:30AM and 6:30PM.
On the west coast:
11:30PM (that'd be this Tuesday night,) 7:30AM and 3:30PM.
Here's the schedule of shows.

Channel 163: Sonic Theater
WED: NIGHT TERRORS - THE BUG DOCTOR - featuring me as Dr. Morris
THU: NIGHT TERRORS VOICES OF THE SOUL - written by me, featuring me as Nick Lebay and a lot of random voices
FRI: NIGHT TERRORS LAST CALL

Week 2
MON: NIGHT TERRORS BLACK LIST - featuring me as Jason
TUE: NIGHT TERRORS - THE HOUSE IN THE CLOCK
WED: NIGHT TERRORS BYRONS TALE
THU: NIGHT TERRORS AND GOD LOOKED - featuring me as Pa Grenaull
FRI: NIGHT TERRORS LOVE AND MURDER - written by me

I hope those of you who have XM or who have family and friends that have XM will tune in.

If you don't have XM, some of these episodes are available for purchase at
http://www.spokennetwork.com/list.aspx?catId=151

...or you could just look for the ones I wrote:
http://www.spokennetwork.com/list.aspx?author=Elie%20Hirschman

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Elie interviewed by CVDG

The interview I recorded with John Gallogly of Creative Voice Development Group is now up on their site. The interview was the first in a new series, entitled "Voice Coaches Radio."

Here's the description of the interview series:
Tune in to Voice Coaches' "Doctor Don" Bowers and John Gallogly as they share information about all things Voice Coaches. You'll hear what our staff and students have been up to, get some great tips and hear from some very unusual callers!


You can access the page at http://www.voicecoaches.com/hear.cfm/section/radio


Or, you can hit the MP3 directly at http://www.voicecoaches.com/audios/one.mp3

Monday, October 16, 2006

Behind the scenes at DP

I've started a new podcast series, giving the world a peek behind the scenes at Darker Projects.

If you read this blog, you might already know that Darker Projects is one of the premiere sources of quality audio fiction on the internet. What you might not know is where a lot of these great ideas come from.

This podcast brings you the voices of those responsible for the great content you hear on Darker Projects. Hear interviews from producers, composers, writers and actors. Have a look behind the scenes... at Darker Projects.


For our premiere episode, we hear from Judah Friese on his involvement in Darker Projects and how the group came about.

http://www.darkerprojects.com/behind_the_scenes_at_darker_projects.html

Monday, October 09, 2006

My voiceover story

This is an email I sent to someone tonight, adapted for public consumption on this blog.

How did I get started in voiceovers? Well, I saw a posting in a Teaneck adult ed booklet for a course entitled "Using your voice to make money." It was given in the school near the library by a fellow named John Gallogly from Creative Voice Development Group, based in Albany. The course (1 + 1/2 hour lesson, actually) was fascinating and at the end they did a little practice session where we actually recorded some audio. I was hooked, and when John called me to evaluate my voice the next day ("A little fast, but nice and clear"), we talked price. It was not cheap to do a full voiceover training, but I was able to talk him down into a discount rate for me. We then had 4 one-on-one hour training sessions and then recorded my demo. After that I had a marketing seminar ("How to shamelessly promote yourself") with Bill Chaput. You can Google all these names to see what they are about, by the way.
After that, I designed my own CD label and website (cheapest option, but probably not the smartest) and started getting ahold of lists of agents and casting directors. You can buy a magazine called Ross Reports, once a year they have a voiceover and cartoons issue. Also, you can buy labels of casting directors and agents- these are all sold at the drama book store on 40th st, up the block from Port Authority in Manhattan.
I got nowhere with sending my CD to these folks however, and so far my paying gigs have come from looking on CraigsList.com and signing up for various voiceover job boards - voice123.com , interactivevoices.com, indieflavor.com and others. I also belong to about 10 voiceover, acting and audio drama groups. These all keep me in practice and confident for any time I need to step behind the mic.
Something I have not done, but should, is attend a seminar hosted by Dan Duckworth ( of AAA Casting ) because he gets casting directors and agents to speak and you get to meet and interview with them and this apparently lands jobs for some people.
I hope this was some help, and I recommend looking for the adult ed series from John Gallogly or David Bourgeois. There is also one by Dan Levine in Bergenfield, I think, which should be the same thing, but i have not met him.
All the best, good luck, and pleae check back with me if you have any questions (or work for me!)

Princess Bride Quiz

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Another new Five Minute Fear


  • Five Minute Fears #6: McMeat
  • (4:38, 4.4 MB mp3, released 2006.10.03)

    Written by Miles Reid

    Featured in the cast are:

    Elie Hirschman was The Jester
    Alex Davis was Barry Kingfisher
    Duane Whittingham was Fred

    The series is created and produced by Paul Mannering and Chris Snyder
    Post-production by Paul Mannering
    The Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby

  • The Voice of Desperate Housewives

    The Voice of Desperate Housewives
    It's preachy and banal. Just like the show.
    By Matt Feeney
    (Originally appeared on http://www.slate.com/id/2119399/ Monday, May 23, 2005, at 6:58 PM ET )


    After the opening credits roll on Desperate Housewives, the show's omnipresent narrator moves in. "Marriage is a simple concept," she tells us on a recent episode. "Basically, it's a contract between two people to love, honor, and ..." blah blah. You know the rest. And then, as housewife Gabrielle (Eva Longoria) throws a piece of pottery at her husband, the narrator unloads the big irony that's been hiding behind all that banality: "But some contracts [emphatic pause] were made to be broken." As was often the case on Desperate Housewives, which finished its first season Sunday night, the "irony" turned out to be more banal than the banality. A show that began last September as a wonderful guilty pleasure had by May turned into something strangely embarrassing.

    Desperate Housewives was set up for the letdown by the pretensions of its creator. Marc Cherry seems to think he's doing cutting-edge social satire, but his big satirical point--that nostalgified suburbia is really a hive of hypocrisy and perversion--is old and obvious enough to support its own brand of nostalgia (i.e., The Stepford Wives, American Beauty). For the first half of the season, Cherry's inspired staging and some deft comic acting--especially by Longoria and, surprisingly, Teri Hatcher--provided a welcome distraction from the show's deeper, and lamer, pretensions. But then his chatty narrator kept bringing the big, dumb underlying themes to the surface, talking openly about issues it would have been better for everyone just to repress.

    The narrator's name is Mary Alice (Brenda Strong), close friend to four other wives and moms on Wisteria Lane--Susan (Hatcher), Lynette (Felicity Huffman), Bree (Marcia Cross), and Gabrielle (Longoria). Mary Alice's suicide in the first scene of the opening episode set the show's plot in motion. This suicide was emblematic: She was being blackmailed by a nosy neighbor who had found out her terrible secret. It's also a catalyst: As the housewives uncover little scraps of the mystery behind Mary Alice's suicide, they end up face to face with their own buried secrets, their repressed hostilities, and ... blah blah. You know the rest.

    Mary Alice narrates with the full-throatedness of a very tall woman with a very high voice, and very slowly. It's like listening to someone who is either really dull-witted or thinks you're really dull-witted. Suspicion of the former is bolstered by the fact that what she says is rarely illuminating and always delivered in the deliberate cadence of a junior-high book report. Mary Alice can also be downright cryptic and sometimes--not to put too fine a point on it--obviously wrong.

    At both the start and the end of most episodes, the narrator offers up general thematic observations on that week's action. "The search for power begins when we're quite young," the narrator intones. (I mean really intones. Lots of intonation. She's virtually singing.) "As children, we're taught that the power of good triumphs over the power of evil." Yes, of course, you think, lulled by the dulcet voice. Then you emerge from hypnosis and realize, Wait a minute! Those are two totally different things! At the conclusion of another episode she tells us, "Death is inevitable. It's a promise made to each of us at birth, but before that promise is kept, we all hope something will happen to us, whether it's the thrill of romance, the joy of raising a family, or the anguish of great loss." Extra credit to whoever can tell me which of these three items we all desperately hope won't happen to us. And at the end of the Valentine's Day episode, the narrator says, "It's impossible to grasp just how powerful love is." Then, after applying the theme of love's power to several characters who mostly aren't motivated by love, she concludes, "And long after we're gone, love remains, burned into our memories." What is the sound of one hand reaching for the remote?

    Recent episodes focused on Gabrielle's dawning awareness that she's pregnant (she's barfing all the time), despite the fact that she's on the pill and very much does not want children. We viewers, however, have seen her medieval, child-wanting husband Carlos (Ricardo Antonio) messing with her birth-control packet. At the end of a recent episode, when Gabrielle rushes to the bathroom and, grabbing her pills, sees that the packet has obviously been tampered with, her expression quickly changes to anger. Then, with the deliberateness of a geriatric nurse, the narrator butts in and tells us, "In that moment, while looking at the pills that had been so obviously tampered with, Gabrielle's nausea was replaced with an even stronger sensation, rage." This is something the audience should be pretty clear on because Eva Longoria is, like, an actress. Note, though, the melodramatic intensifier ("so obviously tampered with") and the hand-holding apposition ("an even stronger sensation, rage"). Such teen-romance tics are in almost every sentence of narration.

    In addition to making sure you're sure you know that what you've just seen is exactly what you think you've just seen, the narrator also guides you through developments in Desperate Housewives' season-long whodunit. Perhaps that's another way of accounting for the show's popularity: It creates an aura of pervasive mystery, but its actual mystery is one that nobody who's not brain-damaged could possibly get lost in, even for a moment. The underlying secret is not uninteresting, as these thing go, but it's extremely simple: A woman (who later committed suicide and then became the narrator of a television show) and her husband apparently stole a young boy and killed his mother, and then raised him as their own under the bland suburban camouflage of Wisteria Lane--where, Marc Cherry wants to say, you can get away with that kind of gothic mischief. That's it. Twenty-three episodes to uncoil that brain-twister. Maybe this is another satirical meta-subtheme: Suburbia's habits of evasion are so deeply set that a non-mystery can remain eerily mysterious, even with an embarrassment of clues and a dead narrator who won't shut up about it.

    Maybe I'm wrong, but I like to think Cherry had Dadaist ambitions for the Mary Alice character. That's preferable, anyway, to another tendency increasingly evident in the Desperate Housewives narration--an unseemly snideness that, for most of its first season, Cherry managed to suppress or sublimate. This new tone is signaled by a subtle change in terminology. Usually, the narrator referred to the show's setting as, simply, "Wisteria Lane." This helps sustain the illusion that the show takes place in some TV Utopia, like Gilligan's Island, and that none of this huffing and puffing about bourgeois hypocrisy and repression is terribly serious. This is good, because I'd hate to find out that the creators of this show I was enjoying so much are as cluelessly self-important as part of me thinks they might be. But then, a recent episode begins with the narrator telling us, "Each new morning in suburbia brings with it a new set of lies." Another begins, sarcastically, "Suburbia is filled with responsible people." This makes me realize that all that trite stuff about buried secrets probably isn't just meant for the joke-world of Wisteria Lane. At season's end, I have to concede that, ugh, Cherry and his writers really do think they're telling us something important about suburban life, which means they really are that far behind the curve they think they're out in front of.

    Dark Matter: Last Shot

    The Last Shot for Freedom

    In the year 2210, Earth is at war with an alien species on a distant planet. When three journalists realize the conditions for Earth’s military presence may not be what they seem, they must endeavor to free everyone from the lies before it’s too late; to risk it all in what becomes… the last shot for freedom.

    (36:29, 33.3 MB mp3, released 2006.10.02)
    http://www.darkerprojects.com/audiop/darkmatter/DM0102_The-Last-Shot-for-Freedom.mp3

    Written by Arman Borghem
    Original music composed and performed by Kai Hartwig and Kevin MacLeod

    Featured in the cast were:

    Laura Post as Major Serena Vince and The Wife
    Phillip Bennfall as The Technician
    Delon Eubena as Mark
    Mark Bruzee as The Announcer
    Colin Snow as Carl Strand
    Brandon Cole as Robert Hudson
    Elie Hirschman as John Kempfer, Badger 2 and Interviewed Soldiers
    Chris Snyder as James Spensor and The Husband
    Dan Gorgone as Commander Russell
    Byron Lee as Interviewing Reporter and Comercial Announcer

    The Series was produced and directed by Paul Mannering
    Post-production by Phillip Bennfall and Byron Lee
    The Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby