File:Susan Bennett VOA D0AD28DF-EAC6-49AB-8FA2-D8DC8B0CB5E0 w1023 n r0 s (cropped).jpg

Page contents not supported in other languages.
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Original file(1,249 × 1,667 pixels, file size: 684 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: Anyone who used an early iPhone knows her voice. She tells you what the weather is going to be, where to find a good slice of pizza, whose birthday it is today, and the answer to nearly every absurd questions you can throw at her.

She is Siri, Apple’s voice-activated virtual “assistant.” But she is also Susan Bennett. Bennett is the original female voice of Siri, which debuted on the iPhone 4 in 2011. Susan Bennett Susan Bennett

Getting into voiceover work, Bennett says, was kind of accidental. Before that, she was mostly singing.

“I started singing jingles and doing studio work, singing backup vocals, and singing commercials and leads for, you know, radio and TV commercials,” Bennett says.

Then one day, it happened. One of the voice actors didn’t show up at the recording studio to read the copy. Bennett got pulled in to substitute. From that moment, she was on a new career path.

But still, Bennett did not expect to find her way onto your phone. Apple did not hire her, and Bennett did not audition for the role. In fact, she had no idea her voice would be used. In 2005, she was simply making recordings for a text-to-speech company.

“For four hours every day, I would read nonsensical phrases and sentences that were created by programmers. The sentences were created solely to get every sound combination possible in the language,” Bennett says.

Because they were created for sound and not content, Bennett says sometimes the sentences could be very strange – for example, “cow hoist in the tub today” or “fasa ask fasa ask fuzzy.”After the recordings were done, the programmers went in and extracted vowels, consonants, syllables and diphthongs, as well as played with her pitch and speed.

“It’s a process called concatenation,” Bennett says. “They go in and take sounds, form them back together into new phrases and sentences.”

And that is how Siri was developed – based on recording sessions Bennett did. That is also how voices like Bennett’s find their way into digital devices like GPS and telephone systems.

How did Bennett feel about being the voice of Siri?

“Siri has been a huge and very positive life lesson for me because I had to face certain insecurities and certain fears. I'm basically an introvert. I am a very private person,” Bennett says. “And so, I thought, ‘Oh, do I want to be this person that's on everybody's device all over the world?’ And I thought, ‘Well you don't really have a choice.’ I had to accept and figure out a way to spin it to the positive for myself, which I've done.”

Her solution, she says, is to embrace her “Siri voice.”

“When I go out and do speaker events and tech conferences, I don't have to win anybody over. People already love Siri, and so I can just be Siri or a Siri representative. And so it made that sort of transition easier for me. And it really turned into something fun rather than something I wasn't used to doing or particularly comfortable doing.”

Bennett will tell you having certain skills are needed to be a voice actor.

“You have to be able to read well and you have to be able to read within a certain amount of time. You also have to be able to read fast sometimes, because they like to put a lot more copy into 60 seconds than you would think,” Bennett says.

Having a voice coach, Bennett says, is also key.

“It's not enough just to have an interesting voice or a quirky voice or some sort of distinctive voice. People getting into voiceovers need to have a voice coach because it's really a part of acting, and that's why you'll find a lot of musicians and actors doing a lot of voiceover work.”

For Susan Bennett, voiceover work came very naturally. She says it was an extension of singing – for her, she says, it’s about rhythm.

“I think a lot of really, really successful and good voice actors can feel a rhythm to what they're reading,” Bennett says. Or, she says, they add or find a rhythm to make a character sound natural and authentic.

Even though Apple stopped using Bennett’s voice in 2013, her unique rhythm and sound remains an iconic feature – not just of early iPhones, but of the broader quest to create meaningful conversation between human and machine.
Date
Source Voice of America, https://www.voanews.com/a/siri-susan-bennett-iphone/4387109.html
Author Voice of America
Other versions
image extraction process
This file has been extracted from another file
: Susan Bennett VOA D0AD28DF-EAC6-49AB-8FA2-D8DC8B0CB5E0 w1023 n r0 s.jpg
original file

Licensing

Public domain
This media is in the public domain in the United States because it solely consists of material created and provided by Voice of America, the official external broadcasting service of the federal government of the United States.

View Terms of Use and Privacy Notice (copyright information).


Voice of America republishes reporting from the Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and others. Always check the credit; such content is not in the public domain. Occasionally, a wire photo will be originally published with Voice of America watermarks and later corrected updated with the correct attribution. Use caution when uploading recently-published images or when a specific Voice of America photographer is not identified.
Logo of the VOA
Logo of the VOA

Captions

Susan Bennett

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

9 May 2018

0.0125 second

63 millimetre

image/jpeg

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current23:52, 12 July 2021Thumbnail for version as of 23:52, 12 July 20211,249 × 1,667 (684 KB)WhpqReverted to version as of 03:42, 5 July 2021 (UTC) - low resolution crop
19:43, 5 July 2021Thumbnail for version as of 19:43, 5 July 2021534 × 599 (64 KB)SomeWhatLifeReverted to version as of 13:22, 23 June 2021 (UTC) please give a reason.
03:42, 5 July 2021Thumbnail for version as of 03:42, 5 July 20211,249 × 1,667 (684 KB)TmReverted to version as of 19:11, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
13:22, 23 June 2021Thumbnail for version as of 13:22, 23 June 2021534 × 599 (64 KB)SomeWhatLifeCropped a little more.
19:11, 20 February 2021Thumbnail for version as of 19:11, 20 February 20211,249 × 1,667 (684 KB)FiletimeFile:Susan Bennett VOA D0AD28DF-EAC6-49AB-8FA2-D8DC8B0CB5E0 w1023 n r0 s.jpg cropped 50 % horizontally using CropTool with precise mode.
The following pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed):

Global file usage

The following other wikis use this file:

Metadata