Some might call it destiny, but Fogg called it something else.

"It was a fluke," he said with a laugh of the gig he won't ever live down. "Back in the day, they used to have this Screen Actors Guild directory and they were looking at pictures. They picked me out and they called me over. I went in with co-executive producer Steven Brown and he literally just had a camera on and said, 'Can you read this play-by-play?' It was the run through the temple and I had no idea what he was talking about, but my brother and I used to do that all the time; we would make up football games and we used to do our own play-by-play. So I just pulled a little bit of that out and he was like, 'Oh, you know how to do that!' I'm like, 'Yeah!'"

Finding the voice of Olmec, a large faux rock being that presided over the temple and had the "secrets" to the legends, proved slightly more challenging, but for Dee Bradley Baker, it was just another audition. "I was with a voiceover agency in Orlando and I think they got the call. I went in and just started reading some of the legends," Baker said. "I tried using the different voices that were in the legend and they liked what I did. It was just really me trying something. You look at it and go, What is it? Well, it's a giant talking rock head that looks very authoritative and it is. It's big and serious... So what does that sound like? [In Olmec voice] 'It's a big booming voice like that.' I think we found it pretty quickly just because it's kind of obviously what it needs to be: this big, booming, loud, god-like voice.

"I'm not sure if they tried me and Kirk working together," Baker added of the audition process. "But Kirk and I had a lot of fun. No combat between us."