Imitation foreign accents on car radio adverts
Imitation foreign accents on car radio adverts
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ingenieur

Original Poster:

4,643 posts

203 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
quotequote all
Can anyone explain why the idea of using a faux foreign voice to narrate a car commercial on the radio is such a popular thing with people making these adverts?

I can clearly remember Volvo having a pretend Swedish lady advertising for them. At the moment I regularly hear Fiat with a chap speaking in English with an Italian bent. The Renault lady does it in French (speaking English). I don't know where the Skoda lady is supposed to be from.

Ham_and_Jam

3,306 posts

119 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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Trying to imagine this working for Chinese / Korean car adverts biglaugh

Speed 3

5,187 posts

141 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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Glad someone else is irritated by it too. Even as a non-fluent speaker of these languages I can tell they're English. Same for that Mozzarella ad.

I fly on TAP Air Portugal longhaul a lot and they have a brilliant safety video with all sorts of nationalities reading the briefing. Even though I don't speak Portuguese I am exposed to a lot of it and I really struggle to work out who is what nationality if I only listen. The English & Scottish guys are particularly good, would be interesting to hear how accurate it is for a native's ear.

ingenieur

Original Poster:

4,643 posts

203 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
quotequote all
It's also a bit annoying because you know if any politician put on a foreign accent for ANY reason he would probably lose his job and that smacks of double-standards. Sure, I'm saying a politician would be a potential casualty here and people probably wouldn't have any problem with that happening to a politician... but that's just a suggestion for how a situation may arise. I think over the years CEOs and other senior business executives have suffered severe consequences for being caught mimicking foreigners or similar sorts of behaviour.

YET... if it's an advert for a Citroen you can go all stripy t-shirts, onions on strings and distinctly French noises and apparently that's totally acceptable.

I'm not so much annoyed that they're committing this sin.. more that this kind of humorous mimicry has apparently only one legitimate use in commercial advertising in the pursuit of profit but generally it isn't acceptable in public in any other sense that I can think of.

Skeptisk

8,897 posts

131 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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It is a bit of a minefield. Probably safer if you use a native of said country so accent when speaking English is not fake.

On the flip side, if you have a character who is supposed to be foreign and they are speaking English with native English speakers and they don’t have an accent…or probably worse they have a specific regional U.K. accent eg Geordie, would you be able to accept them as foreign?

Of course where it really goes off the rails is where you have characters supposedly speaking in their own language but it is in English and they have an accent, as if they were speaking English (a la allo allo!)

Speed 3

5,187 posts

141 months

Tuesday 11th July 2023
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Reminds me of this:


Truckosaurus

12,843 posts

306 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
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I assume it is done to attract your attention so you listen to the ad rather than let it just become background noise.

steveo3002

11,009 posts

196 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
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how about the essex council estate /stacey solomon style accent advertising pay day loans /postcode lottery and other sparkly tat

"wiv your moneehhhh we will help beat cancaaaaar"

LukeBrown66

4,479 posts

68 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
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Skoda, apparently all of a sudden we have to say SCHkoda instead of Skoda, coz some fake accent actor said it..

Oh and the best bit about radio, is the stupid moronic ad companies then expect the poor voice actress to read the terms and conditions really fast while still doing the accent, which they cant of course. Renault are great, she loses it completely, makes me even less likely to buy one. Don't patronise me, I know they are sodding French. That is nothing to shout about by the way, being French!

Why on earth do these cretinous, moronic, self fulfulling nutters think this makes any difference to buying a car.

it is like ALWAYS driving a car in city streets with no traffic, it is like pretending a supermodel turns her head to see a bloody Kia Ceed drive past. All blokes in ca ads have beards, all women look like supermodels, it is not attainable, realistic or relative so just stop.

What planet are these people on and why do people continue to use them>?

mattnovak

338 posts

124 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
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Skoda IS pronounced “Schoda” in Czech… see the little accent above the S? It changes the sound of it.

Truckosaurus

12,843 posts

306 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
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LukeBrown66 said:
...it is like ALWAYS driving a car in city streets with no traffic...
This is because the UK rules prevent them showing car adverts with any sort of speed or enjoyment.

When you see American adverts for cars they are totally different.

ingenieur

Original Poster:

4,643 posts

203 months

Wednesday 12th July 2023
quotequote all
Truckosaurus said:
LukeBrown66 said:
...it is like ALWAYS driving a car in city streets with no traffic...
This is because the UK rules prevent them showing car adverts with any sort of speed or enjoyment.

When you see American adverts for cars they are totally different.
It's quite funny that they banned this. Was it in the late 90s maybe? I remember watching car adverts on TV as a kid and seeing them basically rallying the pants off a car as a way of showing you how good it was. Quite convincingly as well.

Audi got around the issue of not being able to demonstrate the performance of the R8 in an advert by showing it running on a dyno and using as much artistic photography and audio as they could to make what I thought was quite an impressive advert.

coppice

9,479 posts

166 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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TV adverts have declined hugely from the Ridley Scott directed , massive budget ads pre internet . Burning fields of sugar cane (?) in Peugeot ads, weird st Dunlop ad with bloke in gimp mask , genuinely funny ads for - eeek - cigars , booze and fags . And now it's 'Buy this ! It's dead good. And, like , we care about stuff y'know? '

I also get profoundly depressed when I realise , from my TV choice , I'm in a target audience for funeral plans and bloody cruises .

But on topic ,, nearly . when will ad directors realise that not quite everyone in the UK wants to hear voiceovers sounding like South London wannabe gangstas innit.

sparkythecat

8,058 posts

277 months

Monday 17th July 2023
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"Nichole?"
"Papa!"

ingenieur

Original Poster:

4,643 posts

203 months

Monday 17th July 2023
quotequote all
coppice said:
not quite everyone in the UK wants to hear voiceovers sounding like South London wannabe gangstas innit.
"Bruv, get a bank account, innit".

I've also noticed the south london gangster voice used in adverts.