It was a very interesting journey, indeed. I’d have to say that it all dates back to when I was in high school, and my friends and I became big fans of Arnold Schwarzenegger. We watched Conan the Barbarian and for whatever reason found the noises Arnold made while he was in pain completely hysterical. There’s a scene where Conan is fighting in a pit with some guy who starts biting him and he just starts making this sound that we became hell-bent on learning how to imitate. From there, we worked on our Arnold impressions, using actual words and not just screaming in pain, and afterwards took to developing impressions of our teachers, much to their delight, I’m sure. So that was the origin of my interest in VO, but I actually got my first VO job because of a composer and music producer friend of mine. He ended up being the audio producer for a Korean company called Nexon, and he had heard me do voices just when we were hanging out socially (probably my Arnold impression). One day he called me and asked me to come audition for their casting director. So, I spent a couple years cutting my teeth on Nexon localizations. I guess you could say that my background in music simply put me in the right place at the right time. Greg Chun