Jamaican, Indian, Middle Eastern, US Accent Characters

0:00
Audiobooks
276
10

Description

A reel of three passages from 3 different audiobooks I narrated.

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

British (General) Indian (General) Jamaican (Patois)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Some of the bulletin boards were covered with pictures including mug shots and crime scene photos. A man sitting alone at a workstation stood up as she entered. Good morning. I'm Tony Jackson, a reporter with the san Say Pez Chronicle. I'm here to cheque the bladder. He kept his eyes on her as he picked up the clip, pulled and handed it to her. The Blatter Miss Jackson. Thank you. She skimmed the pages on the clipboard. I haven't seen you around here before. You knew? No, I've been here a while. Most days are stopping to see Baptiste get the information from the bladder and head back to the office. Sometimes I just called. I see. So did you move to the island with your family? My family? You mean my mother and father? She asked. Trying not to love. I mean, is there a Mr Jackson? No, I'm not married. If that's what you're asking, Central could censor disappointment. He knew her all too well as well as she knew herself. She said, I know you're only trying to make me happy. But you know what? I would have been just as happy with only the rapper you painted? This will set us back. No, it wants to me. I did not buy this for my paycheck or the money I get from my home visits. I've told you what it didn't come from, so just enjoy it and think of me whenever you cheque the time a little annoyed her pretty face now sported a frown. I don't need materialistic things to remind me of you. You are always on my mind now. Aren't you going to tell me how you managed to get me this beautiful watch? As Kirsten cut a small piece of sea Bess, she asked. So are you? Ah, Muslim. I was loosely raised with Islam. The years after the Iranian revolution. Taking Arabic was mandatory in high schools and Islam or rather religion. We'll start throughout my entire studies in Iran. I am, however, an atheist. He finished his sentence before popping a chunk of lamb into his mouth. An atheist? That's interesting. I don't mean many people are openly atheist, let alone one whose apostasy would come with the penalty of death in Iran. That's funny. Last I checked, we were in the United States of America, where I as an American citizen have earned the right to speak my mind. How old were you when you left Iran? Well, I came here in 1984 when I was 19. How do you know about the death penalty for atheists in the round? Anyway, I know a manager in a subsidiary we have back in Geneva. She pointed a folk and Miran while tilting her head forward and raising an eyebrow at Miran. Yes, she's right. I wouldn't openly say so in Iran. Although it doesn't matter. I cannot go back anyway because you exited the country legally and dodged the draught. Mmm. You seem to know a lot about me.