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Karen Commins

Award Winning

Atlanta Audiobook Share-rator™

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Interview with Audiobook Blogger April Holgate

28 December 2014

Authors and narrators greatly appreciate the people who take the time to listen to our audiobooks and then write thoughtful reviews. In this first installment of a new series, I’m excited to interview audiobook blogger April Holgate from Eargasms Audiobook Reviews to find out about her review interests and process.

April’s bio:

I have always been a reader in one form or another. I generally get through a book a day. I just cannot help devouring stories! I was the kid whose favorite teacher was the librarian. She always let me borrow more books than you were allowed. As a kid I was very introverted. I loved going into my books and living an adventure in my head. As I grew older I started coming out of my shell and getting into theatre. Turns out reading and theatre are a perfect combination!

My career has varied from being an artist to working in Broadway theatres to working as a kid’s talent agent then back to being a starving artist again. I have loved every minute of my journey!

10 Questions For April

1. When did you start listening to audiobooks?

I have been listening to audiobooks for several years now. I started here and there while working on art projects or playing video games. I thought it was a great way to make that time more productive. Later I listened during my long commutes to and from work, 2-3 hours each way. Now I have a new job where I am on the computer all day, perfect for listening to books.

2. What prompted you to start writing audiobook reviews?

I started writing book reviews several years ago when I discovered Goodreads. It started as a way to keep track of books I had already read and my thoughts on them. Amazingly enough people started liking the reviews and asking for recommendations. I write a review for everything I read, the good, the bad and the eh. I only started including narrator info in the reviews a few years ago. I realized they were an important part of the experience that I left out. A narrator really can make of break a read.

3. Where do you write your reviews? If it’s a public place, why did you choose it? If it’s at home, describe the room and/or stuff on your desk. A picture would be fabulous!

I am a very fly by the seat of your pants kind of girl. I write reviews on my Kindle, on my iPhone, sneak them in while at work and at my desk. I have written reviews while lounging in bed, on the subway, in the bubble bath, waiting in line and most often at my messy desk. Wherever I am that gives me a moment to think and get those thoughts out. I am almost afraid to show you a picture of my desk because it looks like an episode of hoarders! LOL What can I say, I like chaos.

4. How do you decide whether to read a book or listen to it? Do you ever do both for the same book?

My traditional reading time is very limited due to work and life, so I am very picky about what I physically read. Mostly those are books from authors I am already invested in, who have not made the jump to audio.

Selecting an audiobook is easier because I can listen while I work, commute or pretend to work out. I have plenty of authors and series that I stalk, um follow. I am always watching for them to release. Other books will catch my eye because of the cover art, I like pretty. Then I read the blurb to see if the story interests me. From there I will listen to the sample to determine if I like the narrator. If everything looks and sounds good, I will spend one of my precious credits or accept the offer to review.

I have read a few books both in traditional reading and them in audio. Most of the time it is because the author has made the transition to audiobooks, other times it is because I need to reacquaint myself with a series that I read in ebook and am now switching to audio. I love experiencing the book again in a very different way. Many times I pick up things that I missed the first go around.

There is also the rare occasion when I switch to an ebook because I am not enjoying the narration. It has only happened a few times.

5. Do you have a go-to genre?

Do I ever! I have my top three favorite genres.

Romance, pretty much every sub-genre, I read anything from the sappy sweet to YA to naughty erotic to romantic suspense. I am a sucker for a good love story; smexy steam is always a bonus.

Paranormal/Urban Fantasy, especially if it involves shifters! I love me some yummy shifter crack! My favorite thing about the genre is the way it can rebuild the world you thing you know. It is fantasy but modern as well.

Mystery, love them all, especially a cheesy Cozy Mystery. I love playing detective and trying to solve the crime before all the clues are revealed. There have been a few that gave my inner Sherlock Holmes a real work out!

6. What is your review policy? Do you accept review requests from narrators?

I welcome any offers for audiobooks. I have submission from authors, narrators and publishers. You will find I do a fair share of indie/self-published audiobook reviews. It is important for me to showcase more than just the NYT Best sellers. Generally my policy is just ask, you never know what might catch my attention. I have ever changing book moods!

7. Describe how you approach your reviews. Do you have different criteria for different genres?

For me a review is about liking the book or not. I hate reviews that regurgitate the book blurb or give spoilers. You will not see that at Eargasms. My philosophy is Keep It Simple. I go over what I thought of the book and characters in general. Was there a story, was it any good? How steamy did things get? What kind of narrative was it, single POV or mixed?

I spend at least a paragraph of the review is dedicated it the narration. Again, keeping things simple, commenting in the pace, tone and energy of the read. I have pet peeves about bad accents, background noise and weird pauses.

I do not have a lot of criteria as far as the genres, except for Romance. I need a story with my steam. I am not a fan of thin stories wrapped around oodles of sex. Give me a quality story with my smut!

8. Do you multitask when listening to books? If yes, what else do you do while you listen, and how does listening to books affect the other activity?

I listen while I work, I think it makes me more productive. Oddly enough splitting my attention tends to make me more focused. I get through more work when I am listening to an audiobook . I also listen while I am editing photos or creating props/costumes. Again, I think the audiobook helps me focus more on my task. I don’t usually need to think too hard about work or art, listening is a nice way to let my mind wander.

I also listen at the gym, but we are not going to talk about that torture chamber!

9. Looking back through the reviews you’ve written, please share the link(s) of 1-3 that were favorites of yours and explain why they are special to you.

So hard, it is like picking a favorite book! Impossible! Here are a few more recent ones that I really enjoyed.

http://www.eargasmsaudiobookreviews.com/2014/08/07/jitters-a-quirky-little-audio-book-by-adele-park/
Jitters is a favorite review because it was a book I was expecting to adore. There was such a sense of theatricality about the read, I fell in love! I do not usually enjoy full cast narrations; this was a very happy exception.

http://www.eargasmsaudiobookreviews.com/2014/11/29/audiobook-review-better-nate-than-ever-by-tim-federle/
Better Nate Than Ever is a favorite because I loved the combination of writer/narrator, and Nate really reminds me of so many friends. I can just imagine them as him in their youth.

http://www.eargasmsaudiobookreviews.com/2014/05/09/the-selkie-spell-by-sophie-moss/
The Selkie Spell was such a beautiful read. It was one of those books you want to crawl inside and live. Loved the Irish accents!

10. As a narrator, I sometimes feel I have a spiritual connection to some of the characters in the books. If you were a character in a novel, who would you be, and why?

I am going to show exactly what a classic book nerd I am here. I think I would be either Elizabeth Bennett of Emma Woodhouse. I think I have Lizzie’s forthright attitude and spunk. Emma is my more playful side. Ms. Austen really did know how to craft an awesome character!

I think I could easily relate to most of Shakespeare’s heroines as well. Katherine, Beatrice or Rosalind; all strong, independent and sassy as all get out!!

Connect with April on these sites:

Blog http://eargasmsaudiobookreviews.com/
Goodreads  https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/2016803-april
Amazon
Audible http://www.audible.com/listener/A1KYJA5YM1479G?ref_=a_search_mst_tnaft_5
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/eargasmsaudiobookreviews

Thanks, April, for a peak inside your world! Also, I thank you for all of the narrator interviews on your blog this month, including my interview today!

Do you have a question for April? Please leave a comment!
 

Filed Under: Audiobook Bloggers, Audiobooks, Away From the Mic, Interviews, Marketing, Narrators Tagged With: April Holgate, blogger, Eargasms Audiobook Reviews, reviews

Upcoming Series: Interviews with Audiobook Bloggers

26 December 2014

When you have the courage to put your art out in the world, you know you will get a mix of reactions to it in the reviews.

I have never written a review (and don’t intend to start), but I’ve certainly read plenty, including many left for my audiobooks on Audible.

However, I do look at reviews for 2 primary reasons:

  1. to prepare for an audition of a book I’d like to narrate
  2. after my audiobook is released so that I improve my performance in future books

If I’m reading the reviews for the print editions before an audition, I look for comments about:

  • grammar
  • spelling
  • typos
  • correct word usage
  • amount of graphic sexual or violent scenes
  • amount of foul language
  • plot and character development

Helpful comments include things like comparisons to TV shows and movies, where if you liked the other medium, you’d probably like this book as it has similar character development.

I also like to know that the reviewer reads/listens in the genre for the review. Some people who have never read/heard a cozy mystery JUST DON’T GET IT! They think all mysteries are full of violence and fast action. They leave negative reviews and ratings for books that don’t meet that expectation.

The review is also not the place to complain about the price of the book/audiobook, though many people write one for that very reason.

Whether the review is left for a print edition or the audiobook, it doesn’t help anyone if it doesn’t offer constructive criticism. With an audiobook, if the Audible listener doesn’t like the story, s/he will usually trash the narrator, too, and vice versa.

Those types of reviews usually have 1-star ratings and don’t offer anything helpful to either the author or narrator. They usually just say something generically mean that could have come from a MadLibs, like: “The [story or narrator] was [negative adjective like horrible, atrocious, terrible, awful]! Don’t waste your money!”

It’s like the reviewer is completely outraged that they spent money and then didn’t enjoy the audiobook for whatever reason. They feel it their sworn duty to warn off other people from making the same tragic mistake, yet they can’t articulate the reason the audiobook didn’t meet their expectations.

Whether a reviewer is writing from the heights of wild enthusiasm or from the abyss of negativity, what’s the point of writing a review if a person can’t say what s/he liked or didn’t like about the book? Writing “I liked/didn’t like it but don’t know why” is not a review; it’s an opinion.

Even in a discussion with one’s friends, just saying “I liked or didn’t like it” wouldn’t be enough. Someone who might be interested in the book would almost certainly ask what about it did you like/not like.

I’m not trying to tell anybody to write any certain thing or certain way.  Even the 1-line opinions of “loved it” or “hated it” are valuable because your art made somebody feel something, which is really the point behind creating it.

Since I haven’t written reviews, though, my opinions about them may not matter to anyone but me!

For this reason, I am thrilled to announce a new series of interviews with audiobook bloggers! These people love audiobooks and write thoughtful reviews of the audiobooks they hear.

April Holgate, prolific listener and author of the Eargasms Audiobook Reviews blog will be first in the interview hot seat. Look for her interview here on Sunday, 28 December. Coincidentally (or not!), I’ll be interviewed on her blog that day as well and hope you will check out both of our sites.
 

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Books, Interviews, Marketing, Narrators Tagged With: April Holgate, Audible, Eargasms Audiobook Reviews, reviews

How to Submit Your Audiobooks for Review in AudioFile Magazine

1 December 2014

On 10/29/14, ACX.com hosted a Twitter chat with AudioFile Magazine, the audiobook industry’s oldest and best publication, so that narrators and publishers could learn about AudioFile’s purpose and review policies.

I added all of the Q&A tweets that I could find to a Storify page, which you can read at this link. I also included some headlines highlighting key points.

 

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Authors, Business, Marketing Tagged With: ACX.com, audiobooks, AudioFile Magazine, narrator, reviews, Storify, Twitter chat

How to Embed a Soundcloud Sample in a WordPress Blog

29 November 2014

With more voice artists sharing their recordings on Soundcloud, I thought it might be helpful to share some steps for embedding the Soundcloud player in a WordPress blog.

First, go to the user’s profile on Soundcloud.

Click the Share button (circled below) on the track or playlist that you want to embed.

On the next screen, choose the Embed tab and check the box for WordPress code. I choose the large player on the left of the 3 sizes shown and make a modification to the code pasted in WordPress, which I’ll explain shortly.

Copy the code from Soundcloud and paste it in the Visual tab your WordPress post.

Note that this code gives you a large picture and player like this:

If you pick the middle player on the Soundcloud embed screen, your player is smaller, but your image may not look pretty.

The player on the right side of the embed screen displays a thin strip of the artwork and is so unsatisfactory in appearance that I don’t even want to include it here.

My blog would crash on an iPad if I had more than one of those large players.

I therefore manually change the code for the large player in my WordPress post so that my player looks like Soundcloud’s original small player. I also like that the cover art is fully represented in the small player.

To make your code for the large player look this way, make these 2 changes to the Soundcloud code that you pasted into WordPress:

&visual=false   (default was true)

height=166       (default was 450)

For an example of a finished post, check out this article, which includes 3 small players.
 

Filed Under: Business, Marketing, Narrators, Recordings Tagged With: recordings, Soundcloud, voiceover, WordPress

Karen’s Primer on Narrating Royalty Share Audiobooks

29 July 2013

Last updated 1/11/23

 

One of my mentors, who is a prolific and award-winning audiobook narrator, advised me that it’s better to be working on spec than to be idle. Working on spec enables you to build your portfolio and hone your craft as a narrator.

As a result, I now use royalty share audiobooks from ACX to fill holes in my schedule. You may find that certain audio publishers also want to pay in a royalty share agreement. All of my experience with royalty share work is through ACX, so all of my comments below pertain to that system.

If you have no experience in doing audiobooks, you might want to first volunteer your time. When I restarted my audiobook career, I first recorded a book for LibriVox. I outlined the many reasons and advantages of this project in my post Reasons to Create Your Own Stuff. Note that one big advantage in volunteering is that you will be able to figure out your most efficient workflow — i.e., learning how to punch-in — under no time pressure while simultaneously adding to world literacy.

The one big downside with doing a LibriVox book is that anyone can use your work — including those who harvest your recordings to train AI speech — without compensating you because you donate the completed audiobook to the public domain. Juan Carlos Bagnell wrote an excellent article on his blog about this practice. My LibriVox audiobook A Woman Who Went to Alaska is routinely offered for sale on eBay. I no longer recommend that people volunteer to record for LibriVox.

Instead, I highly encourage you to volunteer to read for your state’s reading service for the blind or Learning Ally to gain and improve skills, as well as provide a needed service to the world.

Also, even if you are a trained actor, you’ll want to watch this video for more info about ACX and a free performance coaching session from Pat Fraley, Scott Brick, and Hillary Huber.

Method

First, you should know that creating an audiobook requires a significant investment of time. As a conservative rule of thumb, an experienced narrator/team will need 6 hours in real time to produce 1 finished hour of audio, from pre-read to file upload. The amount of time needed will vary by a number of factors, including the type of text (some require more pronunciation research than others), the narrator’s experience level, whether the narrator is outsourcing editing and proofing, etc.

Therefore, be sure to pick a book you love as you will be spending a lot of time with it. Audition for any title that interests you and for which your voice and skills are a good fit, but choose carefully!

I used to hold off on doing auditions, thinking that several offers might come at once. More often than not, though, the rights holders can be very slow to make a selection and do not communicate with narrators/producers at all during the process. Now I audition routinely as each audition allows me to continue developing my storytelling skills by reading different authors and genres.

Still, I try to stack the odds of snagging a great book more in my favor by doing additional research before submitting an audition.

You can ask the rights holder how many copies are sold each month in other formats. One of my narrator colleagues won’t consider voicing a royalty share book unless the print sales are equal to at least 1,000 copies a month. However, the print sales aren’t always a good predictor of the sales for an audiobook. Just like the stock market, past performance of a book is no indicator of future sales.

Whether doing a book in a royalty share deal or pay per finished hour, I’ve found it very helpful to read the reviews of the book even before doing the audition. Many times the reviewers will point to a TV show or movie. These hooks into popular culture give you valuable insight as you develop your characterizations and performance. Reviewers also point out things like incorrect word usage or bad grammar.

I also evaluate the book by using the Amazon Look Inside feature. I choose to narrate books that have few if any curse words (and when used, they should be appropriate to the situation or dialogue and not gratuitous), no explicit sex or graphic violence, and no vampires/werewolves/zombies. I can search the book for these things and also get a better sense of the author’s writing style by reading all of the available excerpts. Sometimes the Kindle edition is offered for free, so I go ahead and download it.

I look at the author’s web site and blog.  This step would be even more important if you’re considering a self-published title. I want to know that an author is as serious about writing as I am about narrating. I want to see that they will work to promote their work even more than I do.

I like to pick books in a series, as I outlined on my Facebook fan page.

If you are chosen to narrate multiple books, you don’t have to start all of them immediately! You can communicate with the rights holder and suggest your dates before accepting the contract. You may even build up a queue of work to perform in this manner.

Royalty share work should not come ahead of paying work. I always have 2-4 months on any royalty share contract so that I have the time to take on audiobooks and my regular voice-over work that pays up front. My view is: The rights holder can have it Fast. Good. Cheap. Pick any two.

I use Evernote during the book prep as I described in this Facebook comment.

I outsource my editing and quality review when I have a stipend. If I don’t have a stipend, I often edit the book myself.

Marketing

The publisher or author doesn’t always market the audiobook. Many of the titles on ACX are backlist and don’t have a marketing budget with them. Even if the rights holder did market the book, I still do my own marketing. I use social media extensively to get the word out.  In fact, I love marketing so much that I wrote 2 articles for the ACX blog on topic that are loaded with tips and tactics specific to marketing audiobooks. This article on my blog links to both of them.

I may also use Google+, a press release, and/or a video to promote my work. In fact, I created a book trailer for In The Shadow of Billy the Kid: Susan McSween and The Lincoln County War. I posted the video here on the blog and across social media.

In addition. I’ll create a Google alert for the topic and/or do specialized searches and comment on blogs, in forums, and any other place where people discuss it. For instance, I’ve already mentioned my upcoming audiobook on the Facebook page for the movie Young Guns, which is about Billy The Kid. Someone commented about the birthday of the actress who played Susan McSween, so it was a great lead-in for my comment about the real woman! 🙂

I don’t do all of these things in one day or even in a week. Audiobook marketing is an on-going task.

Money

It bears repeating that royalty share audiobooks are a lot like the stock market: you can have some with amazing returns and some that are under-performers.

Generally, you won’t make a lot of money on just one book. It takes many royalty share books to generate sales for a sizable royalty check each month. Also, realize that your proceeds for each book will build up over time. The royalty agreement with Audible lasts for 7 years.

My sales numbers range from 14 copies (yes, only 14 units sold) on one book to another book with 1000s of copies sold, with an average payment of $2.70-3.00 per unit sold. While you think you will receive 25% of the proceeds, your net percentage is actually less since many of Audible’s members buy the books using their credits. Audible’s very nice Bounty Program pays $25.00 for each applicable sale and has made up for the lower royalty rates in my case.

If I had narrated only that one book with 14 units sold, I probably would still be waiting for a royalty check since you must have $10 in royalties before Audible issues payment. Direct deposit payments usually come around the 17th-20th of the next month, and checks arrive at the end of the next month.

Regardless of the type of payment you choose, you will receive a royalty statement each month for sales the previous month. You can monitor units sold in the ACX Dashboard, but you won’t know how much you earned for each title until you receive the printout. Statements usually arrive the last week of the next month or first week of the 2nd month following the sales period.

If Audible is paying a stipend on your book, note that the rights holder must APPROVE the finished product within 60 days of the date you signed the contract. Once you have the approval, you must send the invoice to Audible in order to be paid. You can find the invoice template in the Stipend Terms and Conditions link on this page. The Time to Decimal Conversion is very handy when determining your finished time for the invoice.

Whispersync, the new technology that lets a reader switch between reading the Kindle e-book and listening to the Audible audiobook, could affect your royalties in two ways. On the one hand, the audiobook price is lower when the purchaser already has the Kindle edition. The royalties earned on the sale therefore would be lower as well. On the other hand, before Whispersync, people either bought the e-book or the audiobook — not both.

In my experience, Whispersync does actually encourage additional sales, which brings royalties that I would not otherwise have. These sales usually earn less than $1 per unit sold. However, it’s one case where you truly can “make up the difference in volume” because you don’t have on-going costs. Whispersync sales may be a case of whether you view the glass as half full or half empty.

My best sales periods have been December/January, where people are buying presents or later using gift cards, and April-June, when people seem to stock up for their poolside and vacation entertainment.

Audible sales are the gift that keeps on giving! Not only do you rack up more units sold in a shorter period, but those sales can get your book on the old royalty escalator for a higher royalty rate if you signed your contract before 12 March 2014.

I also set up an affiliate account with Audible. I use my affiliate link each time I publicize my titles. You can find my explanation of it in this Facebook post. More helpful tips are included in this post. So far, I’ve had a lot of clicks but no affiliate sales. Given time, though, I’m sure that some of those clicks will be converted to sales. I just created an affiliate account with iTunes.

Miscellaneous

Some of the posts above were in the Facebook Audiobook Crowd group, which consists of professional narrators and industry insiders, and the Facebook ACX Narrators and Producers group. Both groups are closed and have active members. I highly encourage you to join both of these groups if you are an audiobook narrator.

My experience with ACX has always been wonderful. I was one of the original beta testers on the site and have been very excited by its growth. The support staff is nothing short of remarkable! They have been incredibly responsive to my emails. I continue to see improvements both in the site operations and the quality of titles posted for audition.

ACX also has an informative, interesting, and helpful blog. Lately, they have been educating the rights holders more about the process, and their efforts are paying off. I’ve had more communication from rights holders in the past week than in the last 6 months!

Thinking again of the advice from my mentor, let me leave you with this quote from author Neil Gaiman (you can substitute the word “narrate” where he says “write”):
I decided that I would do my best in the future not to write books just for the money. If you didn’t get the money, then you didn’t have anything. If I did work I was proud of, and I didn’t get the money, at least I’d have the work.

Original notebook image: iStockPhoto/Aania

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Business, Marketing, Narrators, Observations, Voice-Over Tagged With: ACX, affiliate, Audible, audiobook, marketing, narrator, royalty-share, voiceover, WhisperSync

TDIMH — Going Fast in the Wrong Direction

3 June 2013

This Date in My History — Mon., 6/3/02 10:46PM on my sofa and melting

If it’s true that the harder I work, the luckier I am — which is a quote from either Edison or Jefferson, but definitely on one of my mail-outs — then I should be rolling in v-o gigs.

I sent half a dozen emails yesterday to companies I found at ozonline.tv, which has a directory of all sorts of creative companies in GA. The depressing and overwhelming thing is that the list has tons of companies I haven’t heard of and therefore aren’t in my database. So who are these 350 people in my database? Am I sending all my expensive mail-outs to the wrong people?

I know that I created my database the wrong way. I gathered names from the GA Business Directory and the Atlanta Business Chronicle Book of Lists and created a database without, as they say in marketing circles, qualifying my prospects. I could have good companies with the wrong contact name, companies who would never hire voice talent, and good potential clients all mixed together.

I haven’t had a lot of time to make phone calls while at work, and response to my emails has been limited in the past. I was pleased to get a response tonight to one of my queries yesterday, and the person said they use voice talent and to send my stuff. I wish I could prepare a media kit in less time, but I practically have to print everything new.

It bugs me sometimes (like tonight) to be working hard in my room and hear Drew downstairs laughing at the TV. I’m jealous that he has time to relax and even more jealous that he has steady business from the newspaper for photography without ever having to work for it. He said one day he’d like to do something with photography, and I suggested that he approach the local newspaper with the idea to be a stringer. He did, and they’ve been calling him ever since.

I, on the other hand, have spent countless hours and 1000s and 1000s of hours [sic — I must have meant “dollars”] trying to market myself and get my big break, and for what? This year, I’ve made $925, which is more than the preceding years put together.

I vowed to celebrate every step I take toward my goals, but, right now, I feel overwhelmed, tired, grumpy, and somewhat depressed because I feel like I am spinning my wheels.

Of course, some of my negative feelings could be caused by being hot. The temp today was in the 90s, and the A/C hasn’t been able to keep up.

Today’s Take-aways:

1)  You need to create and maintain a great contact database for your marketing efforts. In addition to contact info, I record notes about conversations, especially the personal data I learn about my contact, and actions taken like demo submissions Before entering any information in your database, you will want to be sure that the person or company actually needs your services and that this person is the one who would make the decision to choose you. Otherwise, you could spend valuable time and money marketing to people who would never hire you.

2)  Balance between business activities and the rest of your life is critical! Rome wasn’t built in a day, and your business won’t be, either. Obviously, balance is a bit more difficult to achieve if you are starting your business in the evenings and weekends after full-time job and even more complicated by your family’s schedule. Time management is your friend! Schedule time for both your business and family activities so that you can move forward on your goals without feeling like you are forsaking your family to do it.

3)  Jealousy is a self-defeating emotion that keeps you from reaching your destiny. We need to learn to be happy with who we are and where we are in order to get where we want to go.

4)  When you feel grumpy and start complaining about everything that’s wrong, try instead to make a gratitude list of all that’s RIGHT in your life. Not only will you instantly feel better, but your gratitude is the key to receiving more for which you can be grateful!

Photo:  iStockPhoto/PhilHillPhotography

 

Filed Under: Away From the Mic, Business, Marketing, Narrators, This Date in My History, Voice-Over

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