Broadcast Voice Handbook: How to Polish Your On-air DeliveryBonus Books, Inc., 2000 - 348 páginas Would you like to have a voice like a television anchor? Internationally recognised broadcast voice specialist and top-rated speaker Utterback has expanded her preeminent book on broadcast voice with this third edition. With over thirty years of experience in voice, Dr Utterback knows what it takes to create and maintain an effective broadcast voice. She shares with you the same advise she gives to clients from the major television networks, local stations, the Voice of America, CNN, Bloomberg News, The Associated Press, ESPN, NPR, PBS, and other television and radio stations throughout the United States and Canada. This book teaches you how to find your best voice, and how to care for our voice so that is still will last a lifetime. Earlier editions have been used in many newsrooms. They have also been widely adopted by such schools as the American University and the University of Missouri-Columbia. |
Índice
BreathingThe Key to Good Vocal | 1 |
Articulation Chapter | 4 |
PhonationUsing the Vocal Folds Effectively | 29 |
Phonation Chapter 2 | 35 |
ArticulationForming and Shaping the Sound | 89 |
Enhancing Meaning through Stress | 123 |
Sounding Conversational | 151 |
Going Live | 165 |
Other Live Experiences | 191 |
Coping with Stress | 213 |
Appendix | 237 |
Mispronounced words Appendix D | 329 |
Suggested Readings | 339 |
342 | |
Términos y frases comunes
abdominal-diaphragmatic breath alveolar ridge anchor articulation audience begin body breathy voice Broadcaster's caffeine cancer cause Chapter clients consonant plosives conversational copy cough create credibility cross-talk delivery desk develop diaphragm directors effective emotion exhalation feel Figure Focus hear high-pitched hoarse imagine important improve inhalation Initial Medial Final interview KDNL-TV keep KXAN-TV laryngeal laryngeal cancer listener live shot look loud lungs meaning meaning-laden words Michael Freedman mouth move muscles nasal cavity newscast newsroom nodules nose on-air talent oral cavity pauses person pharynx Phonation phonemes pitch range practice produce pronunciation proper breathing radio relaxed remember reporter resonating cavities script sentence slash marks smoke soft palate sound booth sound waves speak speech story stress and intonation style talk tape television tell tense tension throat tion tongue viewer vocal energy vocal folds vocal problems Warm-Ups WVIR-TV