The Only Request Any Voiceover Actor or American-Latino Need Follow

There is value to accent-reduction classes for immigrants, because it allows them to better communicate in the U.S. But for those of us who are understood, American-born and still have an accent, accent-reduction classes shouldn't be something we need in order to gain better employment.
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WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA - JUNE 11: (L-R) Actors Justin Baldoni, Anthony Mendez, and Jaime Camil attend TheWrap's 2nd annual Emmy party at The London Hotel on June 11, 2015 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Todd Williamson/Getty Images for TheWrap)

It was my first voiceover workshop and I was already nervous.

If I remember correctly, it was a National Geographic on-air promo script. I finished it as best I could, with absolutely zero experience in reading promo copy and, perhaps, a little more in reading voiceover at all.

The engineer pressed the talkback button and I heard the room on the other side of the glass. I waited for the coach to chime in with her critique, but before her voice, I heard the room and there was already a debate that had started before I had finished: "What accent is that?" "Is it Hispanic?" "No. It sounds like New York." "No. It's urban. Yeah, it's urban!"

There was a need to categorize my accent. Which, up to that point, I hadn't heard one. What accent? I don't have an accent. I was born here. I'm American. I did, and still do, have an accent (although it's "evolved" now -- more on that later.) I just couldn't hear it then. How could I? I was never in a position where I had to tag it; to brand it; to explain it. However, there was a need, by those in the room, to identify it. How strange.

It was as if that was a pre-requisite to their ability to listen and understand my take on the writer's words, because they didn't fit. My unidentified accent and the general market (voiceover code for "White") script. They just didn't go together. I felt naked in a room full of people. Everyone's childhood nightmare.

What is it about accents that immediately puts you on one side of the fence or the other? It's a filter that is so prevalent, particularly in casting and hiring in general, that we've internalized it, affecting our identity and how we perceive ourselves, as well.

It's why the Spanish-speaking immigrant chooses to remain silent instead of risking being judged by her accent. It's why a first generation American has to figure out a way to explain his accent to a group of people that have most likely not experienced Latino culture beyond Chipotle and then go on to spend years trying to hide it and only bring it out when required.

It forces us to be more than bilingual; it forces us to be situational-lingual. (I hyphenate everything. It's a survival technique that's symbolic of how many of us, U.S.-born Latinos, live our lives -- constantly accommodating. Constantly adapting. Surviving. In a foreign land that is already our own.)

I hyphenate, because when it comes to my identity, sometimes it feels like the hyphen allows me to change it like two mismatched Lego pieces. I understand that I'm not seen as "American" at first glance, at least not by the general market. In that sense, the hyphen is my way of explaining myself.

It's a habit that we've become accustomed to. Why does the burden of teaching fall on us, yet the burden of tolerance doesn't weigh an ounce on the general market? Our American-Latino accents have to be explained, yet a Southern accent (of which there are numerous,) despite its own negative stereotypes perpetuated by film and TV, doesn't have to be? It just is. It has to do with what an accent might represent through that filter. That filter of the general market; of the dominant culture. It's either American or un-American (a popular term of late.) That's it. Black or white.

Most people outside of the voiceover business might cringe at some of the casting specs attached to auditions that I see on a daily basis. Urban, street-smart, but not a rapper! Why not? Hispanic accent, but obviously U.S.-born. Obviously. I could go on, but it would fill up the Internet.

The point is that accents are prejudged not because of the accent itself, but what the person behind the accent represents, culturally and socio-economically, to the general market even if, as in narration, you can't see the person saying the words. It's why I encourage as many young American Latinos as possible to consider pursuing casting, producing and writing the work that we as Latinos get to perform, because it shapes these specs into more human, real-world descriptions and, to a degree, can begin a shift toward allowing our literal voices to be heard and, in turn, accepted.

An example I like to draw upon when explaining to people that accents are judged because of stereotypes of the people associated with them, is a recent trend in American speech that's referred to as vocal fry. It's the new "Valley girl" speech, seemingly brought into popular culture by the Kardashians.

The difference between this recent guttural speech and "Valley girl?" How it's perceived.

According to a segment by Faith Salie on CBS News' Sunday Morning, "Women who talk this way are seen by their peers as educated, urban-oriented, and upwardly mobile."

Why is that? Why is not the same opinion afforded to, say, African-American Vernacular English or Hispanic-accented English?

I'm not against any single way of speaking, especially if the ability to communicate isn't hindered. Spoken language is organic and it will continue to evolve and split off into many different forms.

It's something that the written language can only hope to achieve. The over-arching question I have is why do we think negatively about certain accents or dialects while feeling positive about other accents and dialects?

My only conclusion is that those feelings correlate to the feelings we have about the people we associate with those accents. There is value to accent-reduction classes for immigrants, because it allows them to better communicate in the U.S. But for those of us who are understood, American-born and still have an accent (be it because of the neighborhoods in which we grew up or the family or people with whom we grew up,) accent-reduction classes shouldn't be something we need in order to gain better employment. Unfortunately, in voiceover and other industries, it still is.

We can't change perception easily -- if at all -- and the burden of doing so shouldn't fall on us, but we can begin by embracing our own unique way of speech. It's an extension of ourselves. If we begin to drastically change the way we speak in order to conform to some standard (yes, there's such thing as "Standard American English",) then aren't we also changing ourselves and part of what makes us unique?

On the other hand, our identities should be allowed to change, shouldn't they? My voiceover coach, Marice Tobias, says that every time we step to the mic, it's a different read, because in every moment we are a different person; we are constantly changing. It's ethereal, to be sure, but she has a point. We should be flexible with our own identity provided it's not imposed on us.

I know calling for specific accents (or not) are a necessary evil in order to begin to understand someone's vision, but maybe one day, the answer to "What accent is that?" will lie in the only request any voiceover actor or American-Latino will ever need: "Just be yourself, 100 percent unapologetic and proud."

In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, The Huffington Post asked celebrated figures in the community to write about Hispanic heroes who have shaped their lives and/or how their heritage has made an impact on their lives and careers. We will be sharing their stories throughout the month. But we know they're not alone. If you'd like to share your own story, email us at latinovoices@huffingtonpost.com.

Also on HuffPost:

Latino Historical Events Every American Should Know
Cabeza De Vaca(01 of17)
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What Happened: Hispanics, including mestizos, indigenous and Afro-descended people from the area today known as Mexico, explored North America almost a century before the British first founded Jamestown.

Why It Matters: Hispanics aren't foreigners in this country. Latinos, particularly those with Mesoamerican roots, have deeper roots in North America than those with other European backgrounds.
(credit:MPI via Getty Images)
Los Angeles Founded in 1781(02 of17)
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What Happened: A group of Spaniards, Afro-Latinos, indigenous people and mestizos setting out from colonial-era Mexico traveled into California and founded the city of Los Angeles.

Why It Matters: Today Los Angeles is the city with the country’s largest Hispanic population, at nearly 6 million in 2011.
(credit:JOE KLAMAR via Getty Images)
José Martí Lived In New York City(03 of17)
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What Happened: Poet, revolutionary and Cuban nationalist José Martí spent four years in New York City, where he wrote for both English- and Spanish-language newspapers, developing ideas that would influence his thinking about the often tense relationship between the U.S. and Latin America.

Why It Matters: Martí was one of Latin America's greatest intellectuals, earning him a statue in front of Central Park in Manhattan.
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
U.S. Extends Citizenship To Puerto Ricans In 1917(04 of17)
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What Happened: Perhaps not for the most altruistic of reasons, the United States extended both citizenship and, shortly after, military conscription to Puerto Rico in 1917, as World War I raged in Europe.

Why It Matters: Puerto Ricans are American just like anyone born in the 50 states.
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
First Hispanic U.S. Senator(05 of17)
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What Happened: Octaviano Larrazolo of New Mexico became the first Hispanic elected to the U.S. Senate. As a politician, he pushed to boost Hispanic representation so that the political system would reflect the state's population. He also helped write portions of the state's constitution guaranteeing that people of Mexican descent wouldn't be disfranchised.

Why It Matters: Because score Team Latino!
Mendez v. Westminster Decided (06 of17)
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What Happened: Before Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, the courts ruled it unconstitutional to segregate students of Mexican heritage into inferior schools. The plaintiff, Sylvia Mendez, sued after being turned away from a "whites only" public school in California.

Why It Matters: The 1947 decision from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals helped pave the way for Brown v. Board of Education and played a key role in making school segregation illegal. This undated image provided by the U.S. Postal Service shows a 41-cent postage stamp, to be released Friday, Sept. 14 in Santa Ana, Calif., commemorating the 1946 court decision, Mendez v. Westminster School District, that paved the way for the nation's school desegregation. (AP Photo/USPS)
(credit:AP)
The Longoria Affairs Shook Texas Politics In 1948(07 of17)
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What Happened: Private Felix Longoria was killed in the Philippines as World War II came to an end. When his body was recovered and returned to his hometown of Three Rivers, Texas, the director of the funeral home forbad the family from using the chapel because he feared white residents would disapprove.

The G.I. Forum, a civil rights organization led by Hector P. Garcia, organized a campaign that caught the attention of then-U.S. Sen. Lyndon Johnson. He arranged for Longoria to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Why It Matters: This repudiation of anti-Mexican-American sentiment stands as a milestone in march toward the guarantee of Latino’ civil rights.
(credit:AP)
The Cuban Revolution Comes To Power In 1959(08 of17)
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What Happened: Following the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in 1959 and its sharp leftward turn toward Communism within the next two years,

Why It Matters: More than one million Cubans left the island as the Revolution became more radical, with most of them settling in Miami, Fl., a city they transformed. Subsequent waves of Cubans migrated to the United States in the 1980s, with the Mariel boatlift, and the 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union upended the island’s economy.
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Delano Grape Pickers Strike Of 1965-1970(09 of17)
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What Happened: In 1965, Filipino and Latino farmworker unions joined in a strike, and latter a boycott of grapes in the Delano area of California to protest poor conditions. The five-year campaign ultimately succeeded in forcing the grape producers to sign union contracts.

Why It Matters: This early victory helped secure the place of the United Farm Works and its leader Cesar Chavez key players in the Latino civil rights movement.
(credit:(AP Photo))
Zoot Suit Riots(10 of17)
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What Happened: In the 1940s, tensions in California rose between Chicanos and Anglo sailors living there. Authorities viewed many young Chicanos, who favored baggy zoot suits, as criminals. Sailors went around beating them up. The tensions eventually erupted into a week of rioting in June of 1943, when some 200 sailors descended upon Los Angeles and severely beat several "pachucos," at times stripping the suits from their bodies. The violence was met with indifference from police.

Why It Matters: The Zoot Suit Riots stand as a prominent example of the discrimination faced by the Mexican-American community that offers context for the Latino civil rights movement.
(credit:(AP))
The Killing Of Ruben Salazar(11 of17)
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What Happened: During a riot in 1970, police shot prominent journalist Ruben Salazar with a tear gas canister while he was drinking a beer at the Silver Dollar Bar and Cafe in Los Angeles, killing him.

Why It Matters: Salazar was one of the great Mexican-American journalists of his time, who covered local politics with the same vigor as he covered foreign wars. His killing is viewed by many as a symbol of the injustices committed against the Chicano community in California.
(credit:(AP))
Roberto Clemente Helps Change MLB History(12 of17)
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A champion of black and Hispanic rights who began his career before the end of segregation, Roberto Clemente was the first Latino in professional baseball to reach 3,000 hits. He played in two World Series, winning MVP in the 1971 games.

"My greatest satisfaction comes from helping to erase the old opinion about Latin Americans and blacks," Clemente said toward the end of his career. He died in a plane crash in 1972 while delivering supplies to Nicaragua after an earthquake.

Why It Matters: The trailblazing Puerto Rican-born ballplayer not only built a stellar career, but also acted as politically conscious representative of the Latino community at a time when professional sports included few Hispanics. Score Team Latino!
(credit: (AP))
1986 Immigration Reform(13 of17)
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What Happened: In 1986, President Ronald Reagan signed an immigration reform into law that legalized the status of some 3 million people.

Why It Matters: It proves that passing comprehensive immigration legislation is possible.
(credit:Former President Ronald Reagan (AP))
NAFTA Signed In 1994(14 of17)
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What Happened: The countries of Mexico, the United States and Canada signed a free trade agreement in 1994 that reduced trade barriers between the three countries.

Though money was allowed to cross borders more freely, people were not. Millions of Mexican farm workers lost their jobs as cheap U.S. imports put Mexican farms out of business. Many of those migrants eventually wound up in the United States.

Why It Matters: Many Americans think that Latinos leave their countries of origin in order to pursue the American dream. In fact, economic policies that dry up Latin American jobs drive illegal immigration more than the intangible lure of a foreign lifestyle.
(credit:AP)
Prop 187(15 of17)
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What Happened: California Gov. Pete Wilson (R) championed this draconian referendum that would have made it illegal to provide public services, including schools and hospitals, to undocumented immigrants. Challenged in the courts, the law never went into effect.

Why It Matters: Prop 187 paved the way for a long series of anti-immigrant legislation championed by nativists generally allied with the Republican Party. These laws, that many Latinos view as an attack on their communities, help to explain why the GOP consistently underperforms among Hispanic voters.
(credit:AP)
Mexican-American Studies Banned In Arizona(16 of17)
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What Happened: Following allegations that an experimental Mexican-American Studies curriculum in Tucson, Ariz., politicized students, Republican politicians passed legislation to shut it down. Under pressure from state officials, the local board of education dismantled the program, credited by independent researchers with boosting student achievement and fostering critical thinking skills. A lawsuit challenging the legislation has been appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Why It Matters: There are those in this country who feel so threatened by Hispanics that they refuse to let us learn our history.
(credit:(AP))
Largest Ethnic Group In The Most Populous U.S. State(17 of17)
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What Happened: This year, Latinos became the largest ethnic group in the state of California, overtaking non-Hispanic whites.

Why It Matters: Latinos constantly deal with the misperception that we're somehow more foreign than the other immigrant-descended people who live here. In fact, about two-thirds of U.S. Hispanics were born in this country. In places like California or New Mexico, where Latinos are the largest ethnic group, it's become increasingly impossible to deny that Latinos are as American as everyone else.
(credit:FREDERIC J. BROWN via Getty Images)

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