• rubikcuber
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    811 months ago

    “The operator recently had to re-record all of its onboard announcements so that they were compatible with its new fleet of trains.”

    I call bs on this. They lost the audio files, right?

    • @9point6
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      311 months ago

      It will probably be that there is a load more announcements possible on newer trains, so rather than only doing the missing bits with a new voice actor, they may as well do the lot so that it’s consistent

      • Cevilia (she/they/…)
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        111 months ago

        Bold of you to assume Northern paid a voice actor and didn’t just sit a random driver down in front of a microphone. /joke

        • @jocanib
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          311 months ago

          Close. Two random employees, neither of them drivers:

          The new onboard announcements are being recorded by Peter Corley and Laura Palmer, two of Northern’s employees, who were chosen for having “nice voices”. Corley is a conductor based in York with a ripe Yorkshire accent. Palmer is also based in York as Northern’s cybersecurity and compliance manager, but, more controversially, is actually from Essex. “That makes her a northerner by choice, which is always nice,” said a Northern Trains PR person

          • rubikcuber
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            111 months ago

            I really hope Laura Palmer was born pre-1990, because naming your child after a fictional teenager who may or may not have been murdered by her father is pretty grim.

  • HipPriest
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    511 months ago

    It is one of those annoying things when you move to a new area learning the ‘actual’ pronunciation of places though. I remember moving to Yorkshire and learning that Keighley is pronounced ‘keeth-lee’ the hard way.

    But yeah, you would expect the train companies running the area to get it right more often then not I suppose. Though we are talking about Northern here…

    • Cevilia (she/they/…)
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      211 months ago

      How did you think it was pronounced?

      Not judging you for not magically knowing how random place names are pronounced or anything, genuinely curious.

      • @rambaroo
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        11 months ago

        I would pronounce it “kee-lee” as an non-UK person. I would never guess that there’s a T in there, because there isn’t one.

        • @jocanib
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          111 months ago

          It’s more of a f sound (as in rough, enough).

      • HipPriest
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        311 months ago

        As @rambaroo says below I thought it was ‘kee-lee’. My second guess would have been ‘kay-lee’.

  • Cevilia (she/they/…)
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    311 months ago

    Funny thing, when I was growing up there, depending on which side of the town you lived on you pronounced it one of two different ways.

    Neither of which was slay-th’wait.

  • @TeaHands
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    111 months ago

    This brings back painful memories of when I worked at a call centre and had to ring people all around the country on behalf of the job centre. Would have to read out a thing that basically said “you recently advertised a position for a <whatever> at the <placename> job centre, is that correct?”

    Some place names are HARD! And people get really mean to what is obviously a teenage girl on the phone who isn’t from around there and doesn’t know how to say it 😭