How MTV completely changed my life

MTV was my big bang.
For a moment, I turned into a human pinball machine. Stars in my head, flashes of light through my body, and a complete short circuit in my brain. Had I really heard that right? Was he seriously asking me if I wanted to be a VJ for MTV Netherlands?

It was during Lowlands in 2002. The head producer of MTV and TMF pulled me backstage by my ponytail with a question that would change my life:
“Are you up for a new, exciting rock ‘n’ roll adventure at MTV?”

I’d had a few glasses of wine, my head was nearly exploding, and all I could think was: are you kidding me?

Become an MTV VJ? Of course!

Daphne Bunskoek was leaving MTV Netherlands and suddenly an opportunity arose. Two weeks later, I showed up — at her farewell party, no less — with a hastily put-together videotape of myself. A nervous presentation, far from perfect, but apparently there was something there.

Because it worked.

I was invited for a screen test at MTV. A week later, I was sweating in the iconic MTV studio. I could hardly believe I was actually there. MTV was the music channel I adored. The place for music, pop culture, interviews, live shows, and international artists.

And now I was the one getting a shot.

I think I said “shit” at least twenty times in fifteen minutes during that screen test, but apparently they found that charming.

My MTV audition: confidence, music, and guts

A week later, I was sitting across from the big boss of MTV Netherlands.
Butterflies in my stomach, clammy hands, but also complete conviction: I knew they had to have me.

I breezed through the conversation with a mix of confidence, humor, guts, and a huge love for music. They felt it too. The click was instant.

And then it happened.

Within two weeks, I had my own daily MTV studio show.

From that moment on, MTV and I became inseparable — and my life changed completely.

My first MTV interview ever: David Guetta

My very first interview for MTV was at Paradiso with a then relatively unknown French DJ.

A charming guy with a sexy crooked nose, good looks, and a heavy French accent that made his English barely audible in the noise of Paradiso. My interview skills were at about level zero, because I had never interviewed anyone before.

Luckily, he was just as nervous as I was.

It turned into a surprisingly fun conversation.

His name?
David Guetta.

Back then, an ambitious DJ. Now a global star who has collaborated with Rihanna, Snoop Dogg, and Madonna, and has grown into one of the biggest DJs in the world.

But in 2002, he was just sitting across from me at a table with a Coke and a mischievous twinkle in his eyes.

If we had a crystal ball back then, that interview probably would have gone very differently.

MTV memories, old videos, and media adventures

MTV meant the start of everything for me: television, radio, music, interviews, live entertainment, and a completely new life in the media world.

Check out my MTV reel below and dive back into those wonderful years full of music, chaos, backstage stories, and rock ‘n’ roll energy.

Enjoy,
Barbara

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# Why a Dutch voice-over still makes the difference

You recognize a good **Dutch voice-over** immediately. Not because the voice necessarily sounds perfect, but because it feels believable. Natural. Real. As if someone is speaking directly to you. And that is exactly why I have been doing this work with so much pleasure for years. In a time when we are flooded daily with content, advertisements, and videos, how something sounds is becoming increasingly important. People tune out faster if a voice doesn't feel right. Or they keep listening if the tone of voice is spot on. A Dutch voice-over is therefore much more than just “a voice under a video.”

## It's all about feeling

When I started as a voice-over years ago, I honestly thought mostly about technique. A nice microphone. A good studio. A clean recording. But now I know: the real magic lies elsewhere. Feeling. Because a text can be great in terms of content—if it doesn't sound sincere, a listener will tune out. That's exactly why I always try to sense what a production needs first. Should it sound warm and human? Energetic and commercial? Calm and familiar? Or perhaps very loose and spontaneous? A professional Dutch voice-over senses that difference perfectly.

## Why brands choose a Dutch voice-over

More and more companies are consciously choosing a Dutch voice. Not just for intelligibility, but above all for recognition and trust. A Dutch voice-over feels close. Accessible. Real. That works incredibly well for:

* commercials
* web videos
* e-learning
* podcasts
* radio commercials
* explainers
* social media campaigns
* telephone exchanges

Especially online, that connection is more important than ever. People no longer want to hear detached sales talk. They want something that feels natural.

## From my own studio

The great thing about this profession? I work from my own professional studio. This allows me to switch gears quickly and often deliver the same day. Sometimes clients want to indicate exactly how something should sound. Wonderful. But it also regularly happens that someone says: “Barbara… just do what feels right.” And honestly? That trust remains special. It's often in that collaboration that the best results are created. Searching together for the right tone of voice until everything clicks.

## Not a standard voice

What I personally find important as a Dutch voice-over is that a recording never sounds too forced. Of course, something can be commercial. Or tight. Or energetic.                                             But ultimately you want a listener to think: “Yes. This is right.” Not: “Ah, there's another one of those commercial voices.” And maybe that's exactly why I love this profession so much. No two days are the same. Every production requires a different energy, different timing, and different emotion.

## Looking for a Dutch voice-over?

Are you looking for a professional **Dutch voice-over** for your commercial, web video, campaign, or podcast? Then choose a voice that not only sounds beautiful but also adds feeling to your production. Because in the end, people don't just remember what you say. But especially how it felt.

Dutch voice-over

A good Dutch voice-over isn’t just about a beautiful voice, but above all about feeling. In this personal blog, I’ll tell you why sounding natural is so much more important than sounding “perfect,” how I work from my own studio, and why the right tone of voice truly brings a commercial, web video, or podcast to life. Because in the end, people mainly remember how something felt.

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voice-over tekst

Stylist of your voice script

From sultry Spotify banners to fresh stories. From energetic radio commercials to calm E-learnings. My assignments are so varied, no one is the same, but they all have to sound different and perfect. And that is exactly what is so fun about my profession. The creative. Creating, thinking along, fine-tuning your voice over script. Just like sling your outfit.

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MTV, Barbara Karel

MTV, my big bang

During Lowlands, Barbara unexpectedly got the chance to become a VJ at MTV. After a nervous screen test and a convincing interview, she landed her own MTV show. Her first interview was with a then-unknown David Guetta — the start of an unforgettable media adventure full of music, television, and rock ‘n’ roll.

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