Going All Out with the Cast of DAN DA DAN Panel at Anime Boston

Located at the Sheraton Boston Hotel, Sheraton Republic Ballroom covers 4700 square feet and is adjacent to the Hynes Convention Center and can easily accommodate hundreds of people. for Go all out and da and The panel is in Boston animeit’s full of capacity – you might be able to fill a regular panel room on the site into capacity, and then some people stand on the overflow line and try to get in. One thing is clear: people like it and da and– Including voice actors of the hosting group: AJ Beckles (Okarun), Anairis Quiñones (muko), and Kari Wahlgren (Seiko).
The group started with some introductions and general icebreaker questions, questions about voice performances – eg, the difference between recording anime and video games or western cartoons and the feeling of meeting fans who grew up with characters (“If it’s what aging and getting older, you guys, I’m here, I’m here, I’m here,” Wahlgren answered).
The problem of letting the (gold) ball roll and da and– The conversation at the center is about the times when working, with voice actors saying, “What am I doing now?” Beckles – someone who has been reading comics about a year ago when the animation was confirmed, would immediately reply, “I don’t think I like it and da andthat would be me and da and. ”
“That’s mine and da and,” Wahlgren followed the audience’s laughter. Barbara Goodsonopposite Wahlgren Flcl (Taking Goodson as Naota and Wahlgren, Haruko). Valgren continued, “So, when we both got a part of Grandma on the show, we were like being conveyed back and forth, like ‘Oh my goodness, everything is like a big, golden ball.’”
Finally, Quiñones (the person engaged to Beckles) mentioned that Becker’s reading comics made a lot of preparation for her and da and Despite years of reading comics and watching anime, she is largely uncomfortable with all of them. She mentioned Our Last Crusade or the Rise of the New World As another example. How is her character, “should be this seductive big sister Baddie. He’s like, “Why are you doing this?” [And she’s like,] ‘Oh well. Then do you want to like it, sleep together? I’m like, ‘Wow. OK, ‘but also like,’ah yes, anime. You’ve gone. ‘”

Q&A is the main focus of the group, and the Q&A has the audience lined up on the microphone to ask the voice actors questions. With countless others Voice actor Panel, many questions are general questions about sound performance. While most of these questions are quite similar to the kind of things you might ask again and again Voice actor Panels (e.g., favorite and least favorite aspects of sound performances, and what prompted them to participate in sound performances), one person stands out: either (or Beckles and Quiñones); it wasn’t Wahlgren at the time, it wasn’t a thing, the elders of the group had previously been involved in Fan Dubs).
Quiñones publicly admits that he has done fan voiceover like Beckles, and he emphasizes that it is a good way to practice. They both explained that many other voice actors in the past have tried their hands and fans in the past, which is twice as good for aspiring voice actors living on the East Coast, from voice acting centers like California or Texas. Becker suggests if you are aspiring Voice actor Participate in fan voiceovers, worry about what professionals will think of, and don’t tell them.
But, of course, the audience is here and da and First, so there are a lot of questions about the show. One question is how much does voice actors know about Yokai before work and da and. There was not much consensus, but they all got to know them as the show progressed. Another thing is about them wanting to be and da and If they have power for scripts. Quiñones answered Wendigo immediately. For Bex, it was “big feet” (but not like that big feet, like a big, hairy foot), and for Valgren, she wanted a bloody Mary.
When it connects to the scene highlighted by the trio, either for entertainment or a challenge to the sound, Beckers immediately quotes the “Goodbye” scene at the end of episode 4, which makes Okarun repeat “Goodbye” over and over again. Wahlgren then talks about the trickyness of being synchronized in a sushi diet scenario. As for Quiñones, she talks about the pleasure of matching the energy in Jiji’s introduction.
Then things move in a huge direction and there is a question of what the Dunkin Donuts commands for their personal characters are (if you have never been to Massachusetts, especially Boston, then they are everywhere, so to speak). For Okarun, it’s the same thing Becker usually gets: bacon, eggs and cheese on the croissant, which is cool if available. For Muko, this will be a donut with a rainbow sprinkle, and a review. For Seiko, it was black coffee, munchkins, and some cream filling (“not because I wanted to get rough,” Wahlgren said in the audience’s laughter, “but it’s just my favorite.”).
After only an hour of laughter and fan fellowship, the panel ended – the room was still very satisfied. I think, it can be said that everyone has a (golden) ball. No one wants to say…goodbye, or goodbye. Goodbye, or goodbye? goodbye? Or, goodbye?
