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Voice actor seamlessly demonstrates 10 different voices we all recognize and holy moly

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February 16, 2024 | This is genuinely impressive…and a little spooky. In the age of television,

February 16, 2024 | [Read Online]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20the%20Upworthiest&body=New%20Post%3A%20%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fnewsletter.upworthy.com%2Fp%2Fnew-post-066e) [Voice actor seamlessly demonstrates 10 different voices we all recognize and holy moly]( This is genuinely impressive…and a little spooky. In the age of television, radio, and [the internet](, we hear voices all the time, pretty much everywhere we go. From [advertisements]( to customer service prompts to video narrations, voiceovers have become so commonplace that we don't give them much thought. That is, until we see someone actually doing those voices we're so accustomed to hearing. Professional voice actor Tawny Platis [shared a video to her Tiktok]( demonstrating 10 voices most of us will instantly recognize, and it's as uncanny as it is impressive. She seamlessly transitions from a text-to-speech voice to a "detached casual conversation" voice to a bright "We've got denim for the whole family!" department store voice and more. [Read the story]( [Insiders share 'secrets' the average person doesn't know about their industries]( From accessing paywalled studies to getting free upgrades, people in various industries are spilling the beans. One strange reality of life is that there's a lot that happens [behind the scenes]( of…well, everything…that people simply never know about. I'm not talking about [deep state conspiracies]( here or anything, just normal run-of-the-mill industry secrets that only people who work in those industries knows. Some of these "secrets" are actual secrets meant to be kept sacred, like [how certain magic tricks work](. Some are things we don't really want to know, like how the sausage gets made. And some are simply things that industry folks know but don't bother to inform the rest of us about, like the fact that the average movie theater employee really doesn't give a hoot if you sneak in candy as long as you're not obvious about it. We're all curious, though, about what goes on in the back room, behind the counter, under the radar, etc. So when someone on Reddit asked ["What industry 'secret' do you know that most people don’t?](" people flocked to answer—and to see what people said. [Read the story]( [Couple who visited all 63 US national parks names which one is the ‘best’]( They also listed other awards, such as "most underrated," "most epic" and "most awe-inspiring." Longing to visit one of [America](’s many [national parks](, and not sure where to start? One traveling couple just made deciding a whole heck of a lot easier. [Matt and Karen Smith]( have been to all of them. That’s right. All 63 of them. They even survived a [plane crash]( to hit the milestone (more on that later). In a short and sweet 30-second video posted to their Instagram account, Matt and Karen place certain parks into special categories, like “best wildlife sightings,” “most underrated,” and “most awe inspiring,” all before revealing which park, in their opinion, is “the best of everything.” [Read the story]( ['God, what if I was 15?': Julia Roberts responds to being shamed in a photo with her niece]( It opened her eyes to the toxicity of social media. Actress [Julia Roberts]( was late to the game when it came to joining social media, so she was blown away when she finally saw first-hand how toxic it could be. She[started an Instagram account](in June of 2018 and, shortly after, was the target of trolls mocking her appearance in a post by her niece. Roberts [was upset about]( the negative comments people made about her looks and then was gutted when she considered social media's effect on young women. In a 2018 interview with Oprah Winfrey for [Harper’s Bazaar,](Julia recounted the story. “Although something did happen recently on my niece Emma’s Instagram that I think taught me a lot about what it’s like being a young person in today’s society. One weekend morning Emma slept over, and we got up and were having tea and playing cards and having this beautiful morning, and then a couple of days later, she posted a picture of us,” Roberts recalled. [Read the story]( [fb]( [tw]( [ig]( [yt]( [tk]( [in]( Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 GOOD | Upworthy. All rights reserved 1370 N St Andrews Pl Los Angeles, CA 90028, United States of America [[beehiiv logo]Powered by beehiiv](

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