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Ever Wonder About The Voice Behind The Toy?

LeapFrog's My Pal Scout can be programmed to say a child's name by plugging it into an online database. LeapFrog only records new names after three people have requested it.
LeapFrog's My Pal Scout can be programmed to say a child's name by plugging it into an online database. LeapFrog only records new names after three people have requested it.
(
Courtesy of LeapFrog
)

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Listen 4:24

If you're a parent of a young child, you've probably never met 11-year-old Charlie Ibsen, but you might recognize his voice as that of the popular talking toy My Pal Scout, by LeapFrog.

Peter Hartlaub, a pop critic at the San Francisco Chronicle, has given himself a year to track down the voices behind his children's talking toys. He was fortunate enough to meet Ibsen at a recording studio, where he was taping new names that had been requested by My Pal Scout owners.

The green, floppy-eared dog can be programmed to say a child's name, favorite food or favorite animal in Ibsen's voice.

"I have always thought that [the voices] were 45-year-old women," Hartlaub tells NPR's Melissa Block. "And then to find out that he was actually a kid was a surprise for me."

Hartlaub says his curiosity about the voices behind inanimate objects began when he found out that Bart Simpson was actually voiced by a grown woman.

"I started to get suspicious every time I heard an animated character," he says. "And then my children started getting talking toys as gifts ... and that suspicion continued."

Hartlaub says he was impressed by Ibsen's professionalism in the studio, often needing only one take to get it right. And he's not the only one.

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"They're all in awe of him; he's like a rock star when he walks into LeapFrog," Hartlaub says.

After tracking Ibsen down, Hartlaub has set his sights on the voice behind Farmer Tad, a character from LeapFrog's Fridge Farm Magnet Animal Set. He's planning a road trip to visit the woman who provides the squeaky plea, "Hi, I'm farmer Tad! Listen to my banjo."

An Iron Man toy and the Radio Flyer Retro Rocket are also on the list. Hartlaub says he envisions a man with huge deltoids belting out, "Retro Rocket!" But he knows he will probably be completely shocked when he finds out who it really is.

"Who knows? It could be anybody. That's what's part of the fun of this."

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