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Project Main Details
International Female 40-ish. optimistic, strong, knowledgeable (Kate Blanchett, Julianne Moore)
IBM
Internet only
Further Notes:
We cannot accept any auditions with watermarks. Our clients, well-established advertising and production professionals, will not listen to auditions with watermarks.
We apologize in advance for not being able to rate your auditions. While we sincerely do understand the importance of this, we are under terrific deadlines and literally do not have the time to give you the feedback you deserve.
We do appreciate the time you spend to audition and we listen to each and every one of you who respond. If we have deleted your audition, it does not mean that we didn't like it, simply means it wasn't the right voice for this project and we look forward to hearing you for our next posted project. Jan 08, 2008 15:44:24 Pacific Time (US & Canada) Jan 10, 2008 17:00:00 Pacific Time (US & Canada) Yes (click here to learn more about
Project Parameters
Script Details
A case can be made that the computer age began on November 4, 1952 when Remington Rand's UNIVAC computer predicted a US presidential election based on just five percent of the votes.
But it wasn't until the 1960s – and a risky move by IBM – that computers would forever change the way we live and work.
IBM's Chairman, Thomas Watson Jr., "bet the business" on a wildly ambitious idea:
To create not a new computer, but a new family of computers which would be entirely compatible with each other - a major departure from any company's existing strategy.
The choice wasn't an easy one. This system wouldn't just demand that IBM's customers change the way they ran their companies – it would also cannibalize IBM's existing product lines.
What tipped the scale was IBMers' deep-seated drive to tackle really big challenges. As Watson put it, "Deep down I believed there was nothing IBM couldn't do." The way we put it today is "Innovation that matters – for our company and for the world." Sample of the script for audition purposes:
A case can be made that the computer age began on November 4, 1952 when Remington Rand's UNIVAC computer predicted a US presidential election based on just five percent of the votes.
But it wasn't until the 1960s – and a risky move by IBM – that computers would forever change the way we live and work.
IBM's Chairman, Thomas Watson Jr., "bet the business" on a wildly ambitious idea:
To create not a new computer, but a new family of computers which would be entirely compatible with each other - a major departure from any company's existing strategy.
Voice-Seeker Details
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