Looking for just the right voiceover for your political spots? It’s easier now, more than ever, to find voiceovers who can speak to the audience you’re looking to reach and hit the tone you’re looking to achieve. Working directly with a professional voiceover artist ensures you are working with someone dedicated to their craft and committed to delivering the highest quality audio performance so that your political spot stands out.
Home Recording Booths and Voiceover Microphones

With high-quality recording studios come high-quality recording equipment. Professional voiceover actors record their voiceovers using high-quality microphones and recording equipment including the Neumann U87 and Sennheiser MK-416, Neumann TLM-103, Audio-Technica AT4040, Warm Audio WA87, or Rode NT-1 to make sure the files you receive meet (and exceed!) your highest standards.
Connect With A Talent Live to Direct Your Session
If you’re looking to direct a live session, not a problem! Many voiceover artists are familiar and comfortable with navigating platforms such as 
Not only do professional voiceover artists have their own studios, but they’re also ready to provide editing and post-production services to make sure the files you receive are ready to plug and play.
So where do you find reliable and professional voiceover artists to help you with your political spots? This task can feel overwhelming and time-consuming, but finding just the right talent doesn’t have to be! We’ve got the Top 5 Ways To Find and Hire a Political Voice Over Artist for your spots today!
Top Five Ways to Find and Hire Voiceover Artists for Political Spots
#1 – Visit a marketing collective like Blue Wave Voiceover

#2 – Use Google to search for a specific type of talent
If you know what you are specifically looking for in your voiceover, Google can be helpful in finding it, especially if you are looking for a political voiceover talent who aligns with a specific value or belief. Pair your voiceover search with keywords for a specific regional accent, language, heritage, social cause, or issue to hone in on the specific type of voiceover you’re looking to incorporate in your ad.
#3 – Work with a licensed talent agency
Licensed talent agencies have networks of political commercial voice actors who are talented and experienced men, women, and children ready to bring your political ad to life and connect with the audiences you want to reach. With a vetted talent roster, you can choose from SAG-AFTRA and non-union talents who can deliver a wide variety of voices.
#4 – Ask for referrals from colleagues who produce political media
The classic phone-a-friend strategy goes into play here! Reach out to your networks and ask if they know of anyone or have worked with voiceover artists with experience voicing political commercials. They might know someone, or they might know someone who might know someone who could be the perfect fit for your next project or campaign! Word-of-mouth referrals are often a great way to ensure you connect with a professional who can turn around your project on time and deliver a high-quality file.
#5 – Post a casting notice on a freelancer site
Sites like Voice123, Bodalgo, and Actors Access can help you connect with a voice actor looking for their next opportunity. If you go this route, keep in mind that you may receive auditions and proposals from amateur voice actors who do not have professional at-home setups or a treated space to do the recording and deliver high-quality audio.
Working with a professional voiceover artist will ensure your political spot connects and resonates with the audiences you’re looking to reach. Bringing in a professional to deliver your compelling message with just the right tone, pitch, and professionalism will give your media the best chance at making a difference for your candidate and campaign!

#3 – Work with a licensed talent agency
“whitewashing” of characters with AAPI heritage. In voiceover specifically, this has recently manifested in situations like Allison Brie, a white actress, voicing a character of Vietnamese descent on the Netflix animated series Bojack Horseman. More recognizable, Hank Azaria, a white actor and voice actor providing for many years the voice of Apu, an Indian-American character on Fox’s hit animated show The Simpsons.
Throughout the pandemic in 2020 and beyond, there was a disturbing increase of hate crimes and events targeting the AAPI community – especially the elder AAPI community. The racists perpetuating violence and a false narrative blame AAPI people for the chaos we are going through in this situation, building a barrier between us, as well as interrupting many work opportunities.
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As a collective of voiceover artists who look and sound like America today, we Blue Wavers are extremely passionate about creating safer, more inclusive spaces for voice actors and people who identify anywhere along the beautifully diverse spectrums of gender, sexuality, and expression. We know this solidarity looks like advocating for LGBTQIA+ liberation in the present and also, remembering and uplifting the queer and trans activists of the past who paved the way.

[New York, New York] – Today,
Additionally, 2021 Pollie and Reed awards political spots voiced by Blue Wave talents Debbie Irwin, Kabir Singh, Kesha Monk, and Maria Pendolino have been awarded Reed Awards by Campaigns & Elections. Congratulations to the incredible creative firms who produced these spots as well as our extraordinarily talented voiceover artists!

Debbie Irwin
What’s one thing that most people don’t know about you?
As a collective of voiceover artists who look and sound like America today, 

Just like gender identity, there are more than the two sets of pronouns that often come to mind: she/her/hers and he/him/his. People also use they/them/theirs and the singular “they” has been common in English for decades. Other sets of pronouns include e/em/eirs, ze/hir/hirs, ve/ver/vers, and more! Some people use multiple pronouns like they/she or they/he.
All of this can often come with the big bad fear of messing up. But guess what? We all mess up! And we’re all going to mess up because we’re human. What’s important is staying teachable and accountable.