Avatar: The Last Airbender Cast Panel with Dante Basco, Greg Baldwin & More | Fan Expo Dallas 2025
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Jun 17, 2025
Join the legendary cast of Avatar: The Last Airbender at Fan Expo Dallas 2025 for an unforgettable panel! Dante Basco (Prince Zuko), Greg Baldwin (Iroh), Jack De Sena (Sokka), Michaela Jill Murphy (Toph), and Zach Tyler Eisen (Aang) reunite to share their experiences voicing some of the most beloved characters in animated television history. Hear behind-the-scenes stories, fan-favorite moments, and insights into what made Avatar a timeless masterpiece. If you're a fan of the series, this is a must-watch panel! @thedantebasco @thegregbaldwinextrathiccch417 @michaelamostly
View Video Transcript
0:00
uh all right uh let's get this started so uh new format for Fan Expo Dallas
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this year in case you uh in case this is your first panel uh in in an effort to
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get more fan questions in we have pre-screened fan questions and had fans
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submit online and so I have your pre-selected fan questions which we will get to as fast as possible uh so if you
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submitted a fan question we will certainly give you a shout out what dante what's up man how's it going uh
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it's going good i feel weird like I feel No no they watch each other look at that chair look at that that's a chair chair
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that's service um so Zuko's redemption arc is one of the most kind of iconic in
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animation i think everyone would agree out here but what is it like kind of bringing
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that complexity life in in an animated art form and and did you relate
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personally to any part of his inner conflict that's a heavy question no um I don't know i didn't
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know I wasn't aware of what the arc was going to be when we started the show i I really thought I was coming on Nickelodeon to be the villain and I
1:11
thought that was cool i was doing a show called American Dragon Jake Long on Disney at the time yeah jake Long and I
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was a hero on Disney i thought I'd be able to be cool to be the villain on on Nickelodeon but as the show started
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going on to really see what was kind of unfolding was really magical and I was I
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was really taken aback by how uh just how many layers that the show had while
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we were doing it but I really at the same time I didn't think too much of how the impact it was going to have on the
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world um but as far as me connecting with him when I look back when we me and Jenna Barney the voice of Coral were
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doing the the podcast Brave the Elements for Avatar Studios yeah shout out to Grave in the elements and so going back
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I I remembered a lot of things I personally Dante was going through uh just trauma and family and and things
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that were going to while I was doing it so I I think me and Zuko kind of intersected in my life at the the right
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time yeah um All right Greg uh Iro was filled with wisdom is there a piece of IRO's advice that uh personally
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resonated with you or that you live by that you've taken into your own life you know uh absolutely i have I have an
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absolute favorite quote it's actually from Kora and you guys have all heard the story and I'm going to hear it again
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uh my wife and I we lived in LA for 30 years the kids were all grown so we moved back to New Mexico where I was
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born uh and the plan would have worked perfectly except we arrived in New Mexico on March 1st
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2020 so 2 weeks later the world shut down i distinctly remember I I was tired
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of watching the news so I just I let it get out so I went for a walk you know it's walking around and you know there's
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I I'm going what have we done i I I have kids on the left coast and on the other on the east coast and it's like there's
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no toilet paper and we're all going to die and this is a terrible thing and oh no and I heard very distinctly in my
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head Iro's voice from the legend of Kora if you look for the light you will often
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find it if you look for the dark that is all you will ever see and from that
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point on that was sort of my COVID actually even beyond CO it sort of became the quote that I always come back
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to uh when I'm having a bad day myself and what I love about that quote specifically and why it resonates with
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me is because it involves an active choice you could just say on the surface it's just a way of saying "Hey try and
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stay positive." But it involves a choice if you look for the light and if you make the decision to look for the light
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and and sometimes the dark is very safe and comfortable but it's nice to get out of it and once you do look for the light
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you will find that uh we're literally enveloped by light wherever we look even at night you can look up into the sky
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and see the you know the stars so I think of of all the IRS quotes and there are so many of them that is my when I'm
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having a bad day that's the one I go back to wow that's uh
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that's that's so beautiful and powerful and I love that that was set up by a story about toilet paper i love that you
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took us on that journey uh Jack uh uh SOA is the comic relief uh but he's also
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the heart of the team in many ways yes how much I I feel like I'm you're already answering this question in the
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voices using how much of um SOA's personality comes from you and who you
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are so Saka important
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um uh yeah I mean I definitely brought a lot of myself to it um there was a lot of uh playfulness to the records and
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stuff we definitely like um Bri uh Michael and Brian told me that they had
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a different vision for the character before casting me and definitely wanted to lean into the comedy once they got me
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in there and were finding stuff um so that's you know I I try to bring that
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energy to to everything I do i tend to You're saying you are Simon a little bit
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there's a similar impulsive curiosity uh Zack how's it going way down there so
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carries a win of being the Avatar at such a young age i mean you you started when you were 13 uh playing this role um
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it it is an iconic character i mean you started voice acting when you were 8 years old um so how do you find that
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emotional depth as a young actor yourself uh and and was it what was it like kind of growing up and growing into
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that character yeah I mean being the same age as the character minus 100 years of course uh that informed a lot
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of like the way I approached it you know what I mean like I was a 12-year-old i only knew how to be 12 so it came very
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naturally right but in terms of like finding the depth and and putting myself
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in his position that's it's tough you kind of just just have to get yourself
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there mentally and I I don't think I've been very fortunate in my life I never had to experience the type of loss that
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Ang had um so you know just hoping that young me was able to do that justice uh
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yeah but uh it was just such a great experience man just being a being a
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character at Nickelodeon was a dream come true for me uh and yeah just you know especially being just it's very
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special and very cool yeah absolutely all right Michaela we come to you all the way so
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far away yeah so um your character is is tough and independent and so important
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for representation um in uh in the blind community uh as a
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as a female character uh I mean totally groundbreaking in so many ways um what
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did it mean to you to kind of voice such a a strong character but kind of also
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kind of bear that weight of of what this character would mean to so many fans yeah um first of all I hear you Melan
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Lord fellow Melan Lord i am Melon
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Lord have to get it out of the way every time um first of all I'm just going to
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give extra love and if we can do a little round of applause for Mike and Brian just because they're incredible um
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they would not be here you would not be here and because of their writing uh I
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really think that that's what made my job easy um and I guess I didn't feel like I was bearing a weight of a
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character because they gave me such a natural I don't know a natural space to
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step into i didn't feel like I was putting on a character i was trying to be tough or I was trying to be blind
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these weren't things that were presented to me as like archetypes to to fill or
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archetypes to copy um so I think they did such a masterful job of creating
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these characters that made it easy for an 11-year-old a 12-year-old to step into because saying the lines and being
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sassy and you know just being the greatest earth bender uh was felt very natural and it's
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interesting whenever you see I mean there are some incredible kid actors who like are obviously very palpably
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talented but I think I I only booked roles that were really well written
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because I think I auditioned better when the roles were well written so I think it is a huge testament to Mike and
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Brian's creation of her and without her being so I don't know so naturally tough
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and naturally badass I don't know if my audition would have been as good i don't know if I would be your tough um so it
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never really felt I don't know I never felt pressure um and I think that can also be a huge thing as a kid too uh
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when you come into the studio especially if you have all these talented adults who like have had lots of experience and
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you've got Andrea Romano who's an incredible director uh you know you might feel a little anxious and I never
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felt anxious i felt like it was just coming home every Tuesday after middle school um and so I I I really just thank
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Mike and Brian and like the whole team for making it feel like a comfortable space uh and then it was very easy for
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me to just turn up the tomboy parts of me i was definitely a tomboy as a kid uh and I just turned off the parts of me
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that were like "Oh I like wearing heels and going shopping." I was like "We'll turn those down and not pay attention to those and we'll turn up the the bits
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that are very sassy and opinionated." And uh it was kind of like oh I don't get to have a filter awesome all right
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yeah let's just yell at people and you know keep your knees high single toes you know let's It was very natural for me awesome all right well uh I don't
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want to Yeah absolutely yeah i don't want to take up uh any more
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time i want to There was so many great overwhelming an overwhelming response of pain questions so I want to make sure to
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get to those um and I am going to shout out your name so if you're in the room uh cheer wave your arms so we see you
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because I don't want to take away that experience and interaction um and this one is we'll try to go fast do as many
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as possible we got a hard out at 9 they're going to close the lights off and they're going to start cleaning the
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floor so uh here we go um for Greg uh this is uh from Marcus from Dallas is
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Marcus here is there a Marcus you can take this but All right marcus Marcus great question Marcus uh Greg uh
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stepping into the role of Uncle Ro after um uh the passing of Makeo must have been so emotional how did you approach
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honoring his legacy while making the role your own well first of all I'm really glad when I was cast that the
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social media was not as toxic in 2006 as it is now because I probably would have run away streaming and it's like no I
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don't want to i I knew though I had been a huge fan of MCO since
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1977 uh and I knew when I was passed it's like you know what people are going to say you know oh you're trying to you
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know you're replacing Monaco mco is absolutely irreplaceable and I think by just admitting that you know when people
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will say to me well hey Baldwin you're no MCO it's like no I I'm not you know MCO was nominated for an Academy Award
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and for a Tony mco started the first Asian-American equity house in the United States i mean his and if you look
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at his resume he has worked that goes back to Male's Navy back in the 50s i mean no I'm not MCO uh I I look forward
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to meeting him someday but you know not today all right you know give us give me a little time and I I think it sort of
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resonates with people that I really am his fan and I'm you know I think one of his biggest fans and I'm serious about
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it i I could not replace him all I could do was try to sound like him which is what they paid me to do and but I think
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it's it's kind of funny m I think he was in his early 70s when he passed away
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yeah and I was 46 when I was cast and now I'm 64 and I do find that as my vocal cords
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become the age that his vocal cords were when he was recording I think my my
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impression actually is improving over time yeah amazing yeah
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great question uh this one is for Zach this is from Sophia sophia is there a Sophia
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wait I'm sorry i didn't hear you Sophia all right yeah that's better uh sorry
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get back to the question here um and carries the burden of being the avatar but also keeps this childlike spirit how
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do you balance those very heavy and light moments in your performance yeah I mean that's like kind of the beauty of
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Hang as a character and and as Michaela was saying about the writing it's it's a testament to the writing it's really an
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actor's dream to have a character that has that much range you know um but I think that like so much of me was in the
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character uh I was a silly goofy kid just like Ang um but you know I could also keep it serious every now and again
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uh but yeah it was just like it was it was fun i I it was always a good time in
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the booth um had some really deep heavy moments but got to balance it out with
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uh with the penguin sledding and it's all about balance it's all about balance all about balance thank you Sophie
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uh this is a question for the whole group from Jordan from Frisco jordan
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did anyone who submitted a question actually show up to the panel jordan are you Jordan i'm Jordan hey
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Jordan thank you for coming thank you for your question uh this is for for all
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of you how did you first get uh into voicing
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we're supposed to be fast um okay uh I started acting when I was five in theater and commercials and then the
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agency I was at when I was like seven opened up a kids voiceover department and they're like "Can you read?" And I was like "Yes." And they're like "Can
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you take you know decent direction?" And I'm like "Yes." And they're like "Cool try this voice acting thing." Uh and so I did and I started doing lots of
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background voices and ADR and looping stuff and then I started auditioning for more character roles when I was like 910
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and that's when they meet the Robinsons and like prom stuff happened and then Mang in season one of Avatar happened
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when I was like 11 and then talk came along when I was 12 here we go spark notes nice that was good that was great
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uh personally I started acting at four i have to try to speak as fast as you i don't know if I can do that uh started acting at age four uh did a lot of live
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action yeah you know on camera stuff uh eventually started just going out for more voice roles and it just worked
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really well with my lifestyle as a kid on the East Coast not in LA didn't have to be on set all the time didn't have to
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memorize lines i could leave school go straight to the booth and then make it in time for hockey practice and uh yeah
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it's great very rewarding yeah very similar kid actor on camera
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stuff um before I started doing that in LA that was my like LA journey was like I was doing on camera stuff and then they just started sending me VO stuff
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and I I fell into it loved it um my first actual VO stuff was a a a a local
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Boston Radio Disney commercial for the after school program I was at and I just
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went to like give a little testimonial and then I made friends with the guy who ran the booth at the Radio Disney thing
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and I just started emailing him ideas for Radio Disney commercials from my personal eight-year-old email i can only
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imagine you but they eventually just like you can come get a job like they hired me then to like a Radio Disney
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thing it was not any of the ones I pitched unfortunately but uh but yeah I started started doing small stuff back
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there in Boston and then moved to LA and and then just went for it are there recordings of these uh I I doubt it it's
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like an 8-year-old you like morning zoo radio Disney i'm sure it's all I'm sure
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they didn't record anything back then you know let's hope you still have access to the email account that you
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sent those emails from wow to um should I say my to my Ace Ventura themed
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8-year-old email account
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I I knew I wanted to be an actor since I was a kid so my wife and I left Texas moved to LA in ' 87 by the way I was
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raised in Texas y'all anybody here from
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Texas anyway uh we moved there you know I was lucky enough to get my SAG card when I booked five McDonald's
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commercials and I thought I was rich and I would have been but the product was McDonald's pizza so you know but I was lucky I got
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my SAG card then you know we had we had our kids 11 months apart they were Irish twins and so I was a little busy for a
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while uh let the kids get a little older and then I love the theater went back to do a play once the kids were old enough
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and it launched in an elementary school and I had to do several different characters and the director said "You
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know you're pretty good at this Balden why don't you go take classes with my friend Sue Blue who is also a casting
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director and so I did that." Uh and Sue was kind enough and liked me enough to
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call and you know get me an agent and so from that point it sort of snowballed you know and uh I'm lucky enough to be
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up here with these people now fantastic
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yeah I started I was a break dancer in the streets of San Francisco and I was a B boy i went to LA as a
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dancer found out there's an acting town i mean we end up acting became actors
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and film and television stage and then tripped into a booth in uh for Disney
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and I did a movie called The Goofy The Goofy Movie and then I did a line in the movie that
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that goes "Yo Stacy talk to me talk to me talk to me baby."
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That That was pretty That was pretty deserving of a mic drop that you did just there also you're you're
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underelling yourself because you were in a little tiny movie around that time called Hook [Applause]
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you can never get away from All right that's all the time we have
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good night we can end on No um here's another question for the whole group uh
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and by the way thank you for your answers uh obviously in Dallas we have a huge voice acting community with country
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roll being based here uh so I have a feeling that question was uh pointed at
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how do I get into this and so uh that advice is not taken lightly so uh uh
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props all you would voice actors out there go do it go do it um another question for the whole group uh by
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Camille from Arlington camille it it's past Camille's bedtime um if
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your character had a spin-off series all about their adventures after the show what would it be about
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i mean of course finding his mom but we It's in the comic books but it would
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still be cool to see it i think Saka would have a great um like food travel show like a Bourdain style
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uh I want to I want to see just how they turn blue like where did that come from
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what you know so funny you're so funny Twinkle Toes
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okay um I I know we have the comics which who here's read a lot of the comics you know that Okay so we get we
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get some canon stories so we watch like open up a metal bending academy and then she like misses bending and then she
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like discovers I'm so sorry she discovers another kind of bending that's happening underground okay I'll leave it a little vague if you haven't read it
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yet but I feel like um we see a little bit of Inora too i feel like she'd just go back to like underground fighting and
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then like she might retreat with the badger for like a year and kind of like backpack through the swamps and the
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forests um and not talk to anyone i think she wants that we need
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like the real housewives of bossing like that yes oh that's so good oh that's why
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bossing sleigh i thought I thought about this you know
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in many ways I think Iro is Mr rogers for another generation because the the lessons are very much the same everyone
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has worth you're not defined by your past and above all else be kind to be kind be kind and I would love to see a
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show for preschoolers with Iro very much in in the Mr rogers Neighborhood realm
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called Iro's Tea House and it's just just literally a series of simple lessons about how we should treat each
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other respectfully that that is what I would like to see
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i I would watch all of those shows those are Yeah uh another question for the whole group uh from Ethan from Denton
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ethan yeah ethan Denton represent were there any inside
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jokes pranks or funny behind the scenes moments from recording sessions that still make you laugh today that you can
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This is a family-friendly show so Well I was Yeah mine are mostly tame cuz I was
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12 um I I just there were a couple tidbits um I don't know if they were
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fully inside jokey but they're just they stick in my memory very very vividly uh
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one was that if you walked through the front doors and you were just hit in the face with the smell of butter you knew
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that there was fresh popcorn in the kitchen and it was going to be an extra good day in the studio and I always got a big bag of popcorn before I went in um
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the second is that like one of the first times I met Gray Azula our lovely Azula uh she was she she was pregnant with her
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first kid and I remember her being so sweet and she's like you know about to be a mom and then I was sitting next to
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her and we started recording and she turned me and I was like "Oh my gosh." And I was very terrified cuz I was like
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"She was so nice and she's so mean." Uh and then the third is that Dante rides
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motorcycles occasionally and so he would be late with like his leather jacket and his helmet under his arm and I'd be like
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"Oh okay." Like "Sorry I'm late." And I was like "Yes we're
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fine." Well yeah that's right when I was like um inside joke just for the fan
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base and now that we have you know we I don't always have a sign pition in sign language it's Zuko always saying and I
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need to say it now in sign language maybe I can learn this i must regain my
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honor what is honor is that honor that's honor i didn't know that it
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does look like kind of conjuring an element yeah i must do one more time i
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must regain my honor
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very good give it up for ASL interpreters by
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the way you should see their muscles uh they
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they work so hard all weekend long so thank y'all so much um for the whole
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group another question uh this is from uh this is from Natalie from Fresco
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natalie are you here is anybody name no all right be quiet Sophia yeah here we
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go here we go natalie uh what's the one moment uh and I'm sure it's hard to pick
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one but what is one moment when a fan story really touched you personally i'm sure you have a million every weekend at
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a convention you'll walk away with a million more here this weekend but do you have one that really distinctly
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sticks out see they have so I'll start off all uh
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it I mean a lot of people people have very strong feelings about Iro and and I he's universally beloved and very few
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things are and I think that's because we aren't ambivalent about our parents you know you either love them or hate them
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and I think Iro reminds people of the father they wanted or the father they were lucky enough to have and people you
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know share stories all the time but there was this one guy I specifically remember he was telling me about how he was deployed in Afghanist was search and
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rescue and that they were huge fans of the show and in uh his barracks they had
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a picture of Uncle Ira and they would touch his picture for luck before they would go out on patrol and I heard that
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story and you know people a lot of times cry when they come but I was crying that day I was like oh I can't believe it you
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know that's just one of many um I remember coming back out of co and
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it was the first New York City Comic-Con so big such a big con and I wasn't was
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supposed to sign there and I show up and then by like lines are like 2 three hour
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lines right like this is crazy and this one guy came up and I'm signing his autograph and he said "You know you know
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I grew up with you." I said "Yeah man we all grew up together i love it." He goes "No no you don't you don't understand." I go "I don't I don't understand what he
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goes um" He said "You you programmed our
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generation." I said "What?" He goes "Yeah Avatar you guys why do you think
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we're the generation that brought protests back the Me Too movement Black Lives Matter we're trying to get the
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world back in balance?" And I was like the back of the like the
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hair on the back of my neck stood up i was like "Oh my god." Uh I had a very lovely interaction at
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the last con I was at where I met a mother and daughter who four or five
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years ago the mother had had me record a a cameo um for her daughter who had like
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just started high school and was like dealing with a lot of bullying and wanted uh uh me to talk to her about the
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show and the character and I talked a lot about um you know how Saka feels so much less Saka's master right the whole
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idea of like him feeling less then cuz he's not a vendor and finding eventually his confidence in what he contributes to
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the group and whatever and so I we I sent a nice long thing talking about that um and then they came up to me very
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recently at this thing and and gave me the update of like hey it's like four years later and I I ended up doing great
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and loving high school and gaining a lot of confidence and just like that that was a like important touchstone for her
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and it's like just wild that these characters in these shows can like be there for people through difficult times
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uh it really blows my mind hello i would love to add a couple is
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that okay just real quick i'll go fast um obviously yes Tough is blind um and
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so for just the disabled community in general I mean not just visual blindness but just you know mental disabilities
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sometimes people are missing a leg sometimes they're like partially blind not fully blind uh so I've had tons of really special moments with people
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coming to my table there was one recently at Megaon uh their name was Saturn and they lost their vision over
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the course of like from like seven or eight years old to they're like 15ish now and so they watched Avatar and have
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the visuals still but now they're fully legally blind and now it's just static um and she was just like you know you
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helped me be okay with this happening and like I still see you whenever I hear your voice and now your voice is what
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like gets me you know through a tough moment and I felt so silly giving her an autograph or taking a picture so I had
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like a little turtle duck on my table and so I was like "Okay take the turtle duck and now anytime you want to remember today just like cuddle the
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turtle duck and that's me with you." when I was like her mom was like "Thank you so much." And I was like sobbing and
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like "Yeah you're welcome." Like trying to get my act together but yeah there it's really cool being like a disabled
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character that people can find solace in when the world maybe isn't uh as welcoming so that's been a huge impact
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that's amazing yeah that's amazing
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all right we got a few minutes left we got one fan question and we did it guys
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we got through all the fan questions thank you for uh submitting uh all these
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great fan questions whether you're here or not uh but uh we're going to we're going to take you out on a really good
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one this one is from Isaac in Dallas isaac of course after I said that yeah you can
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be we got multiple Isaacs in the crowd here we go if you could this for the whole group if you could bend any
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element in real life no training required which one would you pick and what would you do with it first
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fire what are we talking about right now fire Nation forever what i would I would cook
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you could be on his travel show his film could be on your travel show no just Fire Nation cuz it's I would you know
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you're that's the element for me forever
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i am sorry nephew but my my element is air man i'm sorry i like And I would fly
28:41
i would like to fly you know air is air is cool and I I just always spiritual
28:46
things i sort of felt myself drawn to that so you know it's the air air nomads
28:52
jeremiah I flew with some fire and coral we could do that too all right
28:58
um I would say water and it is uh not like I always felt very connected to water um and then I would say healing
29:05
cuz I think it sounds really enlightened to say that I would not use it that I would use it in like a nonviolent way just for healing so I'm going to go with
29:12
healing and Kora there's some fire healers we could do that we can We can
29:17
do that too some of us don't got to choose i'm the Avatar baby
29:26
i feel a little fire from down the air right now
29:31
all right take this out um I I'm a mix of fire and earth in real life but I
29:37
think I would choose Earth because I need to build my own home in this economy
29:44
so that is what I would do that was amazing quick quick little you know chill eightbedroom maybe give myself a
29:51
basement you know and then I don't have to I only have to worry about property taxes right so
29:57
that was amazing well uh Fan Expert Dallas give a huge round of applause we
30:03
pass the last look at that we finished right on time we got through all the fan
30:09
questions and that marks the end of FedEx Model Day one
30:15
[Applause] thank you so much this has been a great panel and we will see you tomorrow
30:21
Saturday for FedEx Model Day Two
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