Bang Zoom! Entertainment

Bang! Zoom is also the title of an album by Bobby McFerrin.
Bang Zoom! Entertainment
Private
Industry Voice recording, TV production
Founded 1993 (1993)
Founder Eric P. Sherman
Headquarters Burbank, California, U.S.
Coordinates 34°10′11″N 118°20′51″W / 34.169684°N 118.347525°W / 34.169684; -118.347525Coordinates: 34°10′11″N 118°20′51″W / 34.169684°N 118.347525°W / 34.169684; -118.347525
Key people
  • Eric P. Sherman (President and CEO)
  • Kaeko Sakamoto (Vice President and Casting Director)
  • Jonathan Sherman (Vice President of New Business Development)
  • Mami Okada (Head of Production / Associate Casting Director)
  • Patrick Rodman (Chief Engineer)
  • Radu Ion (Film Editor)
  • Cory Johnson (Technical Director)
  • Alissa Teige (Creative Director)
Website Offical Website

Bang Zoom! Entertainment is an audio post-production studio with its headquarters in Burbank, California in Greater Los Angeles. It has worked on several anime, video games, feature films, original animation, and directly-to-DVD projects.[1] It is best known as a dubbing company, providing English voice-over work for Japanese anime for companies, notably for Bandai Entertainment, Geneon Entertainment, ADV Films, Funimation Entertainment, Manga Entertainment, Media Blasters, Central Park Media, Aniplex, Viz Media, Sentai Filmworks, NIS America and Pony Canyon

Adventures in Voice Acting

Bang Zoom! Entertainment released a series of interviews with "close to 100 [voice] actors, producers, and casting directors" on DVD, titled Adventures in Voice Acting: Anime, Games and Animation. Many of the interviews took place on set and in their respective studios. The trailer announced many of the voice actors that would appear on the DVD, including Steven Blum, Wendee Lee, Tom Kenny and many others. In 2009, Conan O'Brien and Andy Richter also did voice acting for fun from the Bang Zoom studio on NBC's Tonight Show visiting their studio and providing satirical alternate dubs for Ghost in the Shell and Blood: The Last Vampire. In 2013, O'Brien and Richter, now on TBS returned again to provide satirical dubs for Return of the Pearl Princess.[2]

Production list

Anime

Animation

Films

Anime

Animation

Video games

Live-action dubbing

Recent years

On April 26, 2010, Bang Zoom! Entertainment CEO Eric P. Sherman sent an open letter to anime fans via blog GoAnimeTV. In the letter, he stated that the company will most likely stop producing English dubs of anime titles in 2011 if the industry does not start showing improvement. He cited the fansubbing and unlicensed copying of anime content as the primary reason for Geneon Entertainment USA, Central Park Media and ADV Films closing their doors, as well as the January 2009 layoffs at Bandai Entertainment. Sherman also emphasized in the article that "anime is going to die" if fans do not start buying more content from the studios that license shows for distribution.[5][6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.