Commercial and Book Narrative

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Description

This demo is a mixture of a commercial VO as well as an e-book type reading of paramedics/police struggling to save lives in Chicago. It showcases the energy of enthusiasm for purchasing a product with features and benefits and also the feeling that exudes through life and death struggles with narrative readings.

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Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Accents

North American (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
do not run scared from the Corona virus. Stay prepared. Funkhouser Restoration In these family owned indoor air quality and restoration specialists will professionally eliminate hazardous indoor bacteria, viruses and germs from your home, the A and F D. A approved specialty indoor cleaning process provides 100% cleaning coverage. This protection will ask for a least 30 days or more. Call Funkhouser Restoration 317847 45 37 or F. U. N k. Hauser restoration dot com. The river of violence that flows through Chicago takes not only the dead and the hearts of their loved ones, but it also takes something from those who witnessed the death day after day. The paramedics and the patrol officers, the detectives, the E R. Nurses and the doctors, but not the other day in a Norwegian American hospital in the E. R. With a baby found abandoned in an alley on top of garbage can clinging to life and a crowd around the baby begging that little boy to keep fighting live death grabs at their souls to tries to break them. Chicago Fire Department paramedics and firefighters and Chicago police detectives and officers formed a second ring around the infant. Tough men and women yelling Fight, kid, fight! An offering advice and biting their lips and bargaining with God. Baby was such a fighter and these air tough people to their fighters, said the doctor who led the resuscitation unit. And I told them as soon as the baby moved open eyed, turning pink, I asked them, Calm and see. You did a good job, guys, and they have tears, you know, tears. They cried. Men and women who seem too much and everything they've seen brutalizes them. The indifference of brutality, the rage. They just don't talk about it. Yes, it bothers them, the doctor said. And as they cried and we all did and prayed and I told them, Continue saving people. It's also emotional, you know, I won't forget their faces around the baby way. These tough guys and women were sobbing, tears coming, the baby movie. It was a feeling like we really did something together. We really did. And he's a very lucky little boy. The newborn was found Tuesday afternoon abandoned on a dumpster in their emotion neighborhood on the northwest side of Chicago. A mother and her daughter brought the infant to the nearby firehouse. It's a good thing they made the right decision and brought the baby to the firehouse, said paramedic fire chief Patrick Fitzmorris. It was rush hour. They would have made it to the hospital in time. When the baby arrived, firefighters scrambled administering CPR, tryingto warm the infant and coordinating with police to make sure an ambulance could get through the traffic. And at the hospital, Fitzmorris bargain with God and prayed like so many others before him. But when he talked to reporters about this the other day at a news conference, I heard the Chicago Fire Department's message of compassion from tough Pat Fitzmorris. A message about not judging the young mother. A message asking other young women in a similar situation to bring their infant toe a firehouse instead. And no questions would be asked and no judgments made. You know me, I've got Irish Alzheimer's. I forget everything but a grudge, Fitzmorris said. But I have been going back to church, and I was thinking about the young woman. Amman, desperate. We don't know what went on with her. I'm this way now. Let God judge when Fitzmorris was a kid on the job. Years ago, he answered a call from a woman whose Children had died. She scalded them both with cauldrons of boiling water. She had this 1000 yard stare in rise and I thought, God will someday explain this to me. I almost quit. And the other day in the ER with a baby I said, God, if you don't save this one, I'm done. It will be my last day. But he lived death, wanted him. But this day, God said no. He just said no.