Narrative Mix

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Documentaries
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Description

A mix of narrative pieces including...

Red Cross (Charity), Oblivion (Computer Game), Alan's Big Scary Teeth (Audiobook), Formula 1 (Documentary)

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

British (England - Cockney, Estuary, East End) British (General) British (Received Pronunciation - RP, BBC)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
We rely on the generosity of people like you to help thousands of people when they need us most. By supporting our disaster fund, your money will be used to fund emergency response as soon as it is needed in the UK or anywhere in the world. Help us save lives. Next time a disaster strikes. Please donate today. Thank you. I was born 87 years ago. For 65 years I have ruled us tamary als emperor. But for all these years, I've never bean the ruler of my own. I have seen the gates of oblivion beyond which no waking, I may see behold in darkness, doomed sweeps the land Alan came from a long line of very scary alligators. He was known throughout the jungle for his scaring. It was what he did best. Alan would start each day polishing his scales, sharpened in his nails and brushing each of his big, scary teeth for at least 10 minutes at a time. And after practising is fraud and in faces in the mirror, you'd sneak into the jungle for his morning round of scaring island went snap, snap and he said things like on Brooke. Scary Allan Fear more razor sharp teeth. Each year, 11 Formula One teams contest 17 races across five continents. Thiss sport is a $3 billion a year industry. The competition is ferocious. World's best engineers fight for an advantage that could be measured in just thousands of a second Formula. One cars, designed and built to the limits of technology technology that is a secret is the most advanced military projects. Formula One star drivers are global celebrities. The team's exploit their high profiles to attract massive corporate sponsorship. The money they bring in gets devoured by the need to improve the cause. From week to week in this relentlessly competitive environment, nobody can afford to stand still.