💜Hey guys!! I'm Brooke, an actor in film/tv, voice over, and theatre🎭 I'm also a singer and a work-in-progress dancer!
If you love any of those things, or you just want to watch a short girl do quirky things with her vocal cords, then I'd love to have you in my internet family! (:
Thanks for visiting my channel, and remember... 👑Impossible things are happening every day💙
The first one sounds like a southern U.S. accent. Maybe transatlantic - Southern version. Almost like the British Vivien Leigh trying to do Scarlet O'Hara's southern American accent. Actually, on second listen, they BOTH sound southern. Update: And now I know why. I've learned that this woman was born and raised in Georgia USA.
I saw this somewhere a week or two ago and it stuck with me so much that I had to try and remember where I heard these lines but I'm glad I figured it out and found this again. These characters are great.
I was today old when finally answered the question to *"Why people talk so funny in gma's era?"* How did I never know the transatlantic accent was a thing? Very talented.
It's nonsense. Funnily enough, you get people with high shrill voices calling it "nasally". In reality, there was no such thing as "General American" until the mid-20th century. People in NE USA were predominantly of Southern English descent, and so spoke in that way. As more immigrants arrived, they influenced the accent more and more.
@@danielburger1775 interesting. I live in Tokyo, am a Polyglot, and am married to a Mainlander. She speaks over 5 languages, so we often have discussions on the culture of linguistics. I always just assumed it was just turn of the century, Western culture. My grandmother spoke very similarly.